The idea of work in Pakistan remained fixated on “fixed” for decades: fixed office, a fixed desk, fixed timing and a fixed sense of hierarchy. Work culture in cities like Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad grew around these assumptions. Entire lifestyles were shaped by the commute from home to office, by the boss who sat in a dedicated room, by the tea boy who kept the cups rotating and by the slow paper-based rhythm of work that moved from desk to desk. But over the last few years, this work architecture has cracked open. Post-pandemic, a new culture emerged in Pakistan’s urban centres, driven not by traditional corporations but by shared working spaces, conceiving the idea of co-working. Once a niche idea for freelancers, co-working has matured into a full-blown change of how young professionals work, collaborate and imagine their careers.
This shift is happening for several reasons at once. The first is economic. Office rents and overheads have become increasingly difficult for small companies and start-ups to bear. For many owners, the decision is not between a co-working space and a traditional office but between a co-working space and shutting down altogether. Co-working spaces give them a plug-and-play ecosystem. They do not need to worry about furniture, electricity backups, internet or maintenance. Their highest cost is the monthly membership fee, and this stability gives them breathing room to grow. Pakistan’s urban economy, especially in Lahore and Islamabad, has seen an entire generation of small companies survive their first year only because the overheads were dramatically lower inside shared spaces.
The second reason is cultural. The young professional today is not willing to synthesise what previous generations accepted as a normal workplace. They are less formal, more mobile, more experimental and more driven by community than by hierarchy. Co-working spaces are built around the idea that people need to feel part of something larger than themselves. When a writer sits next to a designer, or an accountant meets a software developer during a coffee break, something unusual is bound to happen. Ideas move, conversations spark. People discover collaborations they did not even know they needed. In Pakistan, where networking opportunities are limited for young entrepreneurs, co-working spaces have become the new informal university where learning takes place not through conventional lectures but interactively.
Co-working spaces provide a much-needed psychological balance for young Pakistanis who often feel isolated while working online from home.
The third driver of the shift is technology. Remote work has become mainstream after the pandemic, and Pakistan’s internet infrastructure, while uneven, is good enough to sustain a large digital workforce. Freelancers earning through international platforms prefer a professional environment over the distractions of home. They need quiet corners for client calls, high-speed connectivity and a place that signals seriousness. For thousands of Pakistanis working independently, co-working spaces offer legitimacy. Sitting in a well-designed workspace improves confidence and productivity. It becomes easier to pitch to foreign clients when the background is not a bedroom wall but a modern workspace that reflects professionalism.
All of this has created a new social fabric inside cities. There was a time when only multinational offices had glass walls and minimalist furniture. Today, young professionals in Pakistan can sit in beautifully designed spaces with warm lighting, comfortable seating and on-site cafes. This environment matters because it shapes how people feel about their careers. A well-curated co-working space tells a new graduate that their work has value, that their environment respects them and that creativity is not a luxury.
Co-working spaces are helping more women join the workforce by offering safer, more inclusive environments than traditional offices, with diverse communities, security, flexible seating and even women-only zones. This is a major change in a country where mobility and workplace harassment remain significant obstacles. At the same time, large companies are reducing fixed office space and adopting hybrid models, using co-working facilities to give employees flexibility while creating settings where corporate teams, start-ups and freelancers can interact and exchange ideas.
The real estate implications of this shift are significant. Commercial districts that once depended on long-term office rentals are being forced to rethink their models. Landlords are exploring short-term leasing arrangements, sub-leasing and partnership models with co-working operators. Buildings that were once underutilised have found new life as flexible work hubs. This can, over time, rejuvenate older parts of cities and create new urban micro economies around food, retail and transport.
Co-working spaces provide a much-needed psychological balance for young Pakistanis who often feel isolated while working online from home. With households unable to operate in restrictive work boundaries and homes not built for long hours of focused work, these shared spaces offer a neutral environment where people can work privately yet remain socially connected, which is especially valuable for freelancers and remote workers operating across different time zones.
Pakistan to sustain the rise of co-working culture, these spaces must expand beyond basic facilities and provide mentorship, skills training and sector-specific networking while staying inclusive and affordable. Government support is essential through policies that repurpose vacant buildings, subsidise memberships for startups and create university partnerships, all of which would strengthen the business ecosystem and modernise the urban economy.
The rise of co-working spaces is not simply a business trend. It is a cultural movement. It reflects a bigger change in how Pakistan’s youth imagine their futures. They want flexibility instead of rigidity. They want collaboration instead of isolation. They want community instead of hierarchy. They want environments that respect their time, energy and creativity. The great shift underway in Pakistan’s cities is not just about where people work. It is about how they live, how they think and how they aspire. At co-working spaces, a new urban work culture is being quietly written, one shared desk at a time.
The writer is a freelance columnist and can be reached at zulfiqar.shirazi @gmail.com