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South Korean Co-Working Space Operator SparkPlus Turns to Blockchain

Blockchain

South Korean Co-Working Space Operator SparkPlus Turns to Blockchain

Seoul-based SparkPlus plans to open co-working centers in properties listed on the blockchain funding platform Kasa Korea

Seoul-based co-working space operator SparkPlus has partnered with blockchain funding platform Kasa Korea, according to a Dec. 17 report from The Investor.

The partnership will aim to innovate the city’s sharing economy by means of a decentralized platform that reduces the barriers to entering the real estate market by promoting collective and indirect fundraising.

Tokenizing real estate

According to the report, SparkPlus plans to open co-working centers at properties listed on Kasa Korea’s blockchain platform. The latter’s platform has been designed for the tokenization of real estate beneficiary securities in the form of issuing digital asset-backed securities that have real estate as their collateral.

Kasa Korea was designated an innovative financial services business by South Korea’s securities regulator, the Financial Services Commission, this April.

In addition to the new partnership, Sparkplus has recently raised 30 billion won ($25.3 million) in a Series B funding round, bringing the total funds raised since its fall 2016 launch to 60 billion won ($51.5 million).

Currently, the company runs 12 co-working centers across Seoul, eight of which are located in the affluent districts of Gagnam and Gwanghwamun.

Improving liquidity in the industry

Blockchain has been gaining increasing traction in the commercial real estate sector, with investors coming to recognize the added value, liquidity and innovation that tokenization can bring to managing property rights and trading diverse investment vehicles in the industry.

This has been noted by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, founders of the cryptocurrency trading platform Gemini, who last year pointed to the improved liquidity tokenized securities can bring to the real estate sector in particular.

This fall, blockchain startup Harbor partnered with Seattle-based real estate investment firm iCap Equity to tokenize $100 million in real estate funds using the Ethereum blockchain.

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