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Quality of Living: The Latest Architecture and News

Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding

The interest in co-living is on the rise, a direction emphasized by the merger between the largest co-living operator in the US, Common, and their European equivalent, Habyt. The two companies manage more than 4,000 apartments in the US and 7,000 apartments in Europe and Asia, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. The term co-living refers to a modern form of group housing where residents share communal spaces for socializing, cooking, and gathering, and have access to shared amenities such as cleaning services or dog walking.

Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding - Image 1 of 4Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding - Image 2 of 4Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding - Image 3 of 4Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding - Image 4 of 4Merger Between Two of the Largest Co-Living Operators Habyt and Common: The Co-Living Sector is Rebounding - More Images+ 3

Monocle's 2016 Conference in Vienna to Debate "Quality of Life" and Urban Livability

The 2016 Quality of Life Conference will bring together key voices from the worlds of architecture, business, design, urbanism and culture to discuss how to improve our nations, cities and workplaces. Welcoming 200 delegates and 20 speakers from around the world, the event will be hosted at the historic Palais Ferstel by Monocle’s Editor-in-Chief Tyler Brûlé, alongside the magazine’s editors and correspondents. The summit will also be broadcast live on Monocle 24 Radio and will featured in a series of films on the Monocle website.

2012 Worldwide City Rankings Reveal Important Regional Trends

Mercer, a consulting leader that helps other organizations around the world advance the health, wealth and performance of their employees, releases a survey annually that helps multinational companies and other organizations compensate employees when placing them on international assignments. Their survey for the year 2012 evaluates over 221 cities around the world on their quality of living with New York City as the base city and highlights several trends that can add onto what we as designers and urban planners believe makes a city successful and livable.

Read on for the 2012 results.