WorkPad opens Carnaby Street office

London’s leading boutique serviced office provider has opened a new office on one of the city’s most celebrated streets. Located on Carnaby Street in the heart of London’s buzzing West End, the building makes WorkPad the only serviced office provider on the Carnaby Estate.

The home of numerous fashion and lifestyle retailers, Carnaby Street is one of the city’s most vibrant shopping destinations, boasting the iconic Liberty’s department store and famous brands such as Diesel, Levi’s and The North Face.

The newly refurbished office building gives its customers access to all that Soho has to offer, adding to WorkPad’s Lexington St, Lower James St and Ganton St offices already in the area. The portfolio now numbers seven buildings with other offices located in Marylebone and Covent Garden.

Following a full refurbishment, including new wooden floors, internal and external painting, and installation of a state of the art networking infrastructure & CCTV system, No.21 Carnaby St offers four floors office space, with scope for customers to tailor their space to their needs. Facilities include a 100MB fibre line and each office will be supplied with its own dedicated VLAN with un-contended bandwidth. The offices come fully furnished as standard.

WorkPad co-founder James Barnett said, “We are excited to be growing the WorkPad portfolio and looking forward to welcoming businesses from a range of sectors to the community. More and more companies want to portray themselves as creative and are using cool locations as a means of giving off a modern, trendy vibe. With suites available to suit businesses sized 4-8 employees, this is an excellent opportunity for small companies to claim a ‘shop-front’ in one of London’s most prestigious areas.”

Jonathan Masri, WorkPad co-founder, added: “Carnaby St fits perfectly within our vision to capture the essence of central London in our offices. These are the vibrant areas that people want to work in and we are looking to make them attainable for companies who would otherwise struggle to secure their own space.”