哥伦比亚麦德林合住空间如何改变工作与社区
In the hills of El Poblado, a former textile factory now houses a sleek co-living complex. Young professionals from Buenos Aires, Berlin, and Bangalore share kitchens, co-work under skylights, and pay one monthly fee that covers rent, utilities, and networking events. This model is rapidly reshaping Medellín's economy.
The business logic is simple: long-term hotel rooms are too expensive for digital nomads, and traditional apartments demand deposits and contracts that short-term visitors cannot manage. Co-living operators fill the gap by offering flexible month-to-month stays with curated community. They earn margins of 15-20 percent by packing more residents per square meter than conventional landlords.
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