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She is a founder who connects scattered moments of “useful time” in the city, linking people with the spaces they need. Through SpaceCloud, Korea’s leading shared-space platform, she has enabled tens of thousands of places across the country to be used by the hour, turning the idea of a lighter, more accessible city into reality. Her starting point was the difficulty of finding meeting rooms during her first job, and today she works between Seoul and Jeju, collaborating with local partners while growing the value of spaces with her team. What began as a small experiment connecting a dozen friends’ spaces has expanded into a platform that now reaches the UK, helping users find the right place at the right moment, and helping hosts make use of unused time. She often describes space as “a business of selling time,” and continues to build fair, flexible access through technology. Looking ahead, she hopes to shape community-living projects in Jeju—places that embody a way of living together—and imagines the island becoming a destination for social developers from around the world. Moving between work and life, between local and global, she keeps designing spaces that grow more alive the more people use them.
By Arirang Radio5
11 ratings
She is a founder who connects scattered moments of “useful time” in the city, linking people with the spaces they need. Through SpaceCloud, Korea’s leading shared-space platform, she has enabled tens of thousands of places across the country to be used by the hour, turning the idea of a lighter, more accessible city into reality. Her starting point was the difficulty of finding meeting rooms during her first job, and today she works between Seoul and Jeju, collaborating with local partners while growing the value of spaces with her team. What began as a small experiment connecting a dozen friends’ spaces has expanded into a platform that now reaches the UK, helping users find the right place at the right moment, and helping hosts make use of unused time. She often describes space as “a business of selling time,” and continues to build fair, flexible access through technology. Looking ahead, she hopes to shape community-living projects in Jeju—places that embody a way of living together—and imagines the island becoming a destination for social developers from around the world. Moving between work and life, between local and global, she keeps designing spaces that grow more alive the more people use them.

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