What If Your Workspace and Your Event Venue Were the Same Building?
Think about the last time you hosted something for work. A client dinner. A team offsite. A holiday party. A board meeting that needed a real room, not a conference call.
You probably started by searching for a venue. You toured a few. You compared pricing, asked about AV, negotiated catering, figured out parking, and coordinated logistics with people who had never met you before and would forget your name by the following week. You spent hours on something that had nothing to do with your actual job.
Now imagine you work in the building where all of that already exists.
The Five-Vendor Problem
Most professionals manage their work life across a patchwork of unrelated vendors. An office or coworking space for daily work. A hotel or event center for client events. A restaurant for client dinners. A conference room rental for board meetings. A team-building venue for offsites. Five relationships, five sets of logistics, five invoices, five chances for something to go wrong.
Each one requires research, coordination, and trust-building from scratch. The hotel conference room doesn't know your AV preferences. The restaurant doesn't know your client's dietary restrictions from last time. The event venue doesn't know that your team likes classroom-style seating, not theater. Every event starts at zero because no vendor has context on you or your business.
That's not just inconvenient — it's expensive. The hours spent sourcing, vetting, and coordinating venues are hours not spent on revenue-generating work. And every time you book a new place, you're absorbing the risk that the WiFi won't work, the projector won't connect, the parking will be a disaster, or the food will be forgettable.
One Building. Every Use Case.
At Revelance, the person who works at a dedicated desk on Tuesday hosts a client dinner in the Taphouse on Thursday and runs a team offsite in the Revel Room the following week. They don't search for a venue. They don't tour anything. They don't negotiate. They walk down the hall, tell the team what they need, and it happens — because the building already knows them.
The boardrooms are the same ones you use for your Tuesday calls, so you already know the screens work and the WiFi is solid. The Taphouse is where you grab a beer after work on Fridays, so you know the bartender and the vibe. The Revel Room is the space you've walked past every day for months, so you know exactly what 125 guests looks like in that room. There's no discovery phase. There's no hoping it works out. You've already stress-tested every part of the building through daily use.
The Bourbon Locker Effect
There's a detail here that sounds small but lands big. When you're a Executive Office member, you have a personal bourbon locker in the C-Suite. When you host a client dinner, you walk to that locker, pull out a bottle you selected, and pour your guest a drink from your own collection. In a building where you work. Where they can see your name on the locker.
No restaurant can replicate that. No hotel conference room. No rented event space. It communicates permanence, investment, and belonging in a way that a reservation at a steakhouse never will. Your client isn't visiting a venue — they're visiting your place.
The Corporate Account Advantage
For companies, this collapses even further. A single corporate account covers coworking, boardrooms, events, the Emergency 9 Golf Simulator and Conference Room, culinary experiences, and Taphouse tabs. One balance. One relationship. One invoice. When the marketing team needs the Revel Room for a product launch, it draws from the same account the sales team uses for client boardroom meetings and the CEO uses for quarterly dinners.
No procurement process for each event. No new vendor onboarding. No separate contracts. The account is already funded, the building already knows your preferences, and the team already knows your people by name. The friction between "I need to host something" and "it's booked" drops to near zero.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Monday: You work from your dedicated desk, take three calls in the phone booth, and grab a RoboJo coffee between meetings. Tuesday: You run a client presentation in the boardroom with the 75-inch display. Wednesday: You host a team lunch in the Taphouse — Sonder Brewing on tap, no reservation needed. Thursday: Your company's quarterly dinner is in the Revel Room with a caterer you chose, not one the venue forced on you. Friday: You close a deal over bourbon from your locker in the C-Suite while your prospect tries the Emergency 9 Golf Simulator and Conference Room.
Five different use cases. One building. Zero logistics.
That's not a workspace with event space attached. It's a business platform that handles everything your company does outside of the actual work — and does it in a building you already know, with people who already know you.
Ready to see it for yourself?
Book a tour of Revelance — Mason's private business club with 25,000+ sq ft of premium workspace and event space.
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