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Workspaces that actually work

The difference between a desk in an apartment and a workspace designed for real work — monitors, chairs, lighting, and internet that holds up on a full day of calls.

18 March 2026 · 3 min read

Dedicated workspace with external monitor and ergonomic chair in an apartment
A real desk, not a side table

Designing apartments for people who have to get work done

Every apartment we own has a dedicated workspace. That sounds obvious; it isn't. Most serviced apartments in Prague treat the desk as a side table with a chair pulled up to it. A laptop fits, a second monitor doesn't, and the lighting is wrong for video calls.

What we install, and why

Each workspace has: a height-compatible desk at least 120 cm wide, an external 27-inch monitor, an ergonomic chair, a dedicated overhead light, and a power strip that stays on the desk instead of trailing across the floor. The internet runs at 200 Mbps symmetric on fibre, tested monthly. The router is positioned so no room in the apartment drops below 100 Mbps at the laptop.

The invoicing bit

Direct bookings can be invoiced to a company name and VAT number. We send the invoice within 24 hours of booking; it lands as a standard PDF with VAT broken out. If your accounting team needs a different reference or cost centre, add it to the booking notes and we will put it on the invoice.

Flexibility without the surcharge

OTA platforms charge for check-in before 15:00 or checkout after 11:00. We don't, as long as the apartment's schedule allows it — and for business stays, it usually does. Tell us what your travel day looks like and we will arrange it.

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