Pop-up spaces by city

Short-term retail listings across the US. Chicago is live — more cities coming.

Chicago

Live

5 corridors · Pop. 2.7M

Dedicated pop-up licensing, strong corridor vacancy, heavy foot traffic. The best city to launch a pop-up in the US.

New York

Coming soon

5 corridors · Pop. 8.3M

The biggest pop-up market in the country. SoHo, Williamsburg, Flatiron, and the Meatpacking District anchor a massive short-term retail ecosystem.

Los Angeles

Coming soon

5 corridors · Pop. 3.9M

Spread-out corridors, strong brand activation culture, year-round weather. LA's pop-up scene is anchored by the Arts District, Abbot Kinney, and Melrose Avenue.

Austin

Coming soon

4 corridors · Pop. 1.0M

Festival-driven demand, growing creative retail scene. South by Southwest creates massive seasonal pop-up demand, and East Austin's creative corridor is growing year-round.

Miami

Coming soon

4 corridors · Pop. 2.7M (metro 6.1M)

Seasonal surge, international brand interest, Wynwood and the Design District anchor a growing pop-up scene. Art Basel creates massive demand spikes in December.

Nashville

Coming soon

3 corridors · Pop. 700K (metro 2.0M)

Music city boom, bachelorette tourism, growing retail scene. Broadway and surrounding neighborhoods are seeing increasing demand for short-term retail.

Denver

Coming soon

3 corridors · Pop. 715K (metro 3.0M)

Growing market, outdoor culture, strong local economy. RiNo Art District and LoDo anchor a developing pop-up scene with lower competition than coastal cities.

Portland

Coming soon

3 corridors · Pop. 640K (metro 2.5M)

Independent retail capital, maker culture, affordable entry. Portland's unique retail culture and lower costs make it ideal for creative brands testing physical retail.

Orlando

Coming soon

3 corridors · Pop. 310K (metro 2.8M)

Theme park tourism, family-driven demand, year-round visitor economy. Beyond the parks, Winter Park and the Mills 50 district offer creative retail opportunities.

Seattle

Coming soon

3 corridors · Pop. 740K (metro 4.0M)

Tech-driven economy, strong local spending, growing retail scene. Capitol Hill and Ballard anchor a market with higher spending power and lower retail competition than SF or NYC.