Ian Patterson
- Othership, a sauna and ice bath space, has become a hotspot for NYC's tech scene.
- Founded in Toronto, Othership opened its first NYC location last year in the city's "Silicon Alley".
- Andrew Yeung, Rho, Northzone and other tech heavyhitters have hosted events at Otherspace.
As techies rush to manage stress through wellness routines, Othership, a sauna and cold plunge studio and social space in New York City, is picking up steam.
When Melissa Henderson, a content marketer for crypto and web3 companies, went to her first sauna class at Othership during the holiday season last year, the vibe shift was immediate.
"Something I've learned the hard way is that startup lifestyle is intense and can be all-consuming," she told Business Insider. "When we arrived, it was another universe. I felt so creative afterward."
Stress relief was a founding ethos of Othership, which is located in the Flatiron district — which is referred to as the city's "Silicon Alley." With this proximity, Othership has quickly become a hotspot for VCs, founders, and other health-obsessed members of New York's tech community.
Andrew Yeung, who organizes tech-focused networking events in New York, has hosted events there. Business-banking app Rho, New York Tech Week, consumer wellness startup Muse, and VC fund Northzone, Collision Conference, and legaltech darling Harvey AI have also held events at Othership.
For Muse, a meditation app backed by OMERS, Felecis, and BDC Capital, Othership was a no-brainer when the startup was looking for a space to host its launch party for its new EEG headband last month, explained chief marketing officer Nadia Kumentas.
"We'd been aware of Othership for a while and always admired the way they built a space where people could genuinely unplug and reset," she told Business Insider. "It was a natural match for what we're trying to do with brain health and mental clarity."
Muse
"It sounds cliche, but there's no other place in New York where you can just sit in solitude and escape from everything," Yeung told Business Insider. "I've never experienced anything like it."
Recreating bathhouse culture
Othership was founded in Toronto in 2020 by Robbie Bent, who formerly worked in ecosystem development at Ethereum, along with his wife, Emily, Amanda Laine, Myles Farmer, and Harry Taylor.
The group was searching for community and socialization without alcohol, and Bent wanted to re-create the bathhouse culture he enjoyed while living in Berlin years prior, where he would hit up saunas with VCs and founders.
The Bents built a cold plunge in their backyard and let friends come over to use it as they liked. Eventually, they converted their garage into a sauna and tea room and self-funded the first Othership location in Toronto, which opened in 2022. A second Toronto location opened a year later, and in 2024, Othership finally landed in New York.
The company also has an app, also called Othership, that offers guided breathwork sessions with music.
Every day, Othership offers a schedule of classes that guide participants into the facility's 90-person sauna, which is heated to 185 degrees. Throughout the class, instructors use aromatherapy snowballs to increase the sauna's heat and humidity to 200 degrees, and the room is lit in different colors based on the theme of the class.
Othership
After a period in the sauna, participants are guided to a dark, cave-like room, where they dip into one of eight ice baths, each able to accommodate up to four people. The baths are kept between 32 and 40 degrees, and depending on the class, participants might be encouraged to sit in the water for multiple minutes.
Different classes explore themes like happiness, unwinding, and acceptance, and many include multiple trips each to the sauna and cold plunge. All of the classes are 75 minutes long, which includes 15 minutes at the end for participants to gather in Othership's common area — an amphitheater-like space with rows of comfortable seating — to drink tea and socialize with other class-goers.
A drop-in class at Othership costs $64, and the company offers various packs and memberships at a discount to frequent visitors.
Othership
While Othership isn't exclusive to tech workers — the space is open to anyone, and the company has built relationships with running clubs and other community organizations throughout the city — it was designed with the intense world of tech in mind, Bent told Business Insider.
The average Othership community member is a professional working a job where they're stressed, Bent said. They could also be a parent navigating work with kids in New York.
"Our take is that if you want to have a spiritual experience, that's great, but we're not a traditional wellness company, and we're not prescriptive about health benefits and we're not a longevity club," he said. "This is a way to deal with stress in a fun environment."
New York's tech scene is jumping on the wellness train
Othership isn't the only wellness destination in New York. With locations in Flatiron and Williamsburg, Bathhouse offers saunas, steam rooms, pools, hot tubs, cold plunges, and spa services. Remedy Place, also in Flatiron, offers acupuncture, cryotherapy, IV, and various other treatments. And upscale gym chain Equinox remains a stalwart among many tech and finance professionals.
For Yeung, who has gained popularity in New York for hosting various tech parties and events and is now a VC investor, Othership brought something new to the table. He first learned about the company a few years ago, when he was living in Toronto. After he moved to New York, Yeung said that he would occasionally make trips back to Toronto just to visit Othership, and he thought New York was the perfect place for their eventual expansion into the U.S.
Compared to other gyms and wellness centers in the city, Yeung said Othership is special because it places a high value on community and getting people out of their comfort zones so they can form deeper relationships with one another.
"They have these classes that can make people scream or cry or laugh with joy, really just becoming their most vulnerable self," he said. "There's no hiding behind the mask. Compare that to most networking events, where you meet someone and don't really know who they are."
Othership.
Yeung is a small angel investor in Othership. During its opening week last year, he hosted an event at the space as part of his popular Junto series. This is a smaller and more selective networking group that spans tech, finance, media, and other related industries. He said that out of all the Junto Club events he's hosted, the one at Othership was by far his most successful.
"You can't quite tell if it's a social or networking event, it's fun, everyone's in a swimsuit, so it's not completely corporate," he said. 'That forces people to bring the best version of themselves, where they're the most vulnerable."
Bent acknowledges that the vulnerability that comes with an Othership class — both emotionally as well as the thought of wearing a bathing suit next to a co-worker or investor — can seem daunting for some. The space offers amenities like rash guards and flip flops, and Bent added that the classes are designed to give each individual the choice of what they want to participate in. Each class includes a sharing portion, where participants are given the opportunity to share a thought or feeling that came up for them during the session.
"This is a golden time to connect," Bent said. In addition to partnering with various tech companies and startups across the city for corporate wellness events, Othership has also started a regular founder night, where members of New York's tech community can meet other founders, share the difficulties they're facing, and make connections.
Othership
Othership is also filling a void in New York's tech community for a social space other than a bar or club. Many New Yorkers and others in the tech community are craving healthier social and networking events that don't revolve around alcohol.
For Hendrickson, who visited Othership right before the holidays, this held true. As a content marketer who works in the crypto and web3 space, she says that it's difficult to find networking events that don't happen at a bar. When she was visiting New York from Miami on a business trip, and a colleague and friend recommended they go to Othership, she was game to skip the traditional happy hour.
"In general, we're experiencing a moment where people are redefining how to make professional connections and what that looks like," she said. "You can't do networking events all day every day, and drinking is bad."
from Business Insider https://ift.tt/FCOW39k