Flexible offices and day passes in London's film, post-production and advertising heartland.

66 Old Compton Street, W1D 4UH
Desk from €689/mo

1 Richmond Mews, W1D 3DA
Desk from €179/mo

180 Strand, WC2R 1EA

222 Regent Street, W1B 5TR
Desk from €984/mo

101 Wood Lane, W12 7FA

21 Carnaby Street, W1F 7DA

213 Oxford Street, W1D 2LG
Desk from €1044/mo

Ingestre Place, W1F 0JL
Desk from €1096/mo

4-5 Langham Place, W1B 3DG
Desk from €1044/mo

Mappin House, 4 Winsley Street, W1W 8HF
Soho is the West End square mile that London's creative industries have called home for a century. Westminster City Council research found that 23% of Soho's daytime workforce works in creative industries — film, post-production, advertising, music and fashion. Dean Street, Wardour Street and Berwick Street are lined with editing houses, agencies and screening rooms; Carnaby Street and Soho Square handle the retail and lunch crowd. Coworking here is loud, dense and built for project teams that bounce between Tottenham Court Road, Oxford Circus, Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Hot desks in Soho typically start at £35–55 per day, monthly hot-desk memberships at around £350–450, and dedicated desks £700–1,000/month. Private offices generally run £900–1,400 per desk per month, with addresses on Golden Square or Soho Square at the higher end. Pricing sits below Mayfair but above King's Cross — you are paying for the postcode and the four-station walking radius.
Soho is served by four stations on its corners: Tottenham Court Road (Central, Northern, Elizabeth), Oxford Circus (Bakerloo, Central, Victoria), Leicester Square (Piccadilly, Northern) and Piccadilly Circus (Bakerloo, Piccadilly). Most Soho addresses are within a 4-minute walk of at least two of those stations. The Elizabeth line at Tottenham Court Road connects Heathrow in 35 minutes and Canary Wharf in 12.
Soho's identity as a creative cluster goes back to the 1950s, when independent film distributors and music publishers settled around Wardour Street and Denmark Street. Today the area still hosts post-production houses (Framestore, The Mill, MPC), advertising networks (BBH, Wieden+Kennedy, Saatchi & Saatchi), music labels (Universal, Sony Pictures Television) and fashion buyers. Westminster City Council research found that around 23% of Soho's daytime workforce works in creative industries — the highest density of any UK postcode.
Yes. Soho is the densest UK cluster for screening rooms and edit suites, with operators like Soho Screening Rooms, Charlotte Street Hotel and several coworking spaces offering rooms by the hour or day. Coworking-bundled screening rooms typically run £100–250 per hour for 10–30 person rooms with calibrated projection. For a private edit suite, expect £400+ per day plus operator costs.
The default mix runs Pret on Brewer Street for fast desk lunches, Bao on Lexington Street and Koya on Frith Street for sit-downs, Barrafina (Dean Street) and Kiln (Brewer Street) for client meetings, and Quo Vadis (Dean Street) for longer post-pitch lunches. Soho House on Greek Street and the Dean Street Townhouse remain the after-work defaults. Pubs like the French House and the Coach & Horses pull the older creative crowd.
Very. The Elizabeth line at Tottenham Court Road puts Heathrow Terminal 2/3 and 4 within 35 minutes and Canary Wharf 12 minutes away. Eurostar at St Pancras is a 5-minute Northern line ride from Tottenham Court Road. Soho also has a deep mid-tier hotel market — Hazlitt's, Dean Street Townhouse, the Soho Hotel, Ham Yard and the Z Hotel chain — which makes it the simplest part of central London for fly-in client days.
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