Buzz

Community > Building

January 1, 1970

With co-working spaces exploding in Atlanta, it is pretty easy to find cool places to work and grow your company. Just our block in Buckhead has over 200,000 square feet of quality co-working space! This is SO good for small business, creatives, and contractors who are mastering the hustle and growing their business.But here's the thing: the Village is MORE than a co-working space. It can be confusing with all the new awesome spaces trying to figure out where is the best fit for you. Atlanta Tech Village is a tech hub. In fact less than 10% of our space is dedicated to co-working. We are for tech startups and operate like an accelerator without the timeline or equity exchange.If you have proprietary technology and are trying to recruit talent, scale, and finesse your pitch- the Village is for you. This is why you can't just walk in and sign up. It's why there is an application process. We don't care if you are B2B, B2C, in IoT, mobile, or securities- we just want you to have a business plan, proprietary technology, and be a culture fit for us. And while the nap rooms, free beer, gym classes, and Friday lunches are fun and a great recruitment tool, our greatest value is found in our people- our curated group of Mentors and Advisors, teachers of workshops, partners at AWS and BizSpark, peer huddles, and enterprise connections. When you join the Village, you are joining a community of 1000+ other like minded entrepreneurs. There is no price tag on that.So if you are looking at the Village just for office space- you are doing it wrong. Unlike co-working or traditional office space, we are an amenity rich community focused on providing the resources and flexibility needed for startups with proprietary technology to grow, scale, and success. YOU are who we are created for and will help fulfill our mission of helping Atlanta become a Top Five Tech Hub in the US.We are the best place to grow a tech startup where community is greater than our building. Join us and increase your chance of success.

January 1, 1970
Karen Houghton