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Storefront > Rent a meeting space > Meeting Room in New York > Meeting Room in Chelsea, New York > Meeting Room in High Line, New York
The High Line neighborhood offers a concentrated stretch of creative, design-forward buildings that make a strong backdrop for meetings, workshops, and training sessions. Browse available meeting rooms and flexible meeting spaces on the High Line and book directly through Storefront.
The High Line corridor in Chelsea has become one of Manhattan's most distinctive professional districts. The area runs from the Meatpacking District through West Chelsea and draws architecture studios, tech firms, galleries, and creative agencies. That mix means the building stock here skews toward well-fitted lofts, converted industrial floors, and purpose-built creative offices — many of which are available as short-term meeting room for rent spaces on flexible terms.
For teams coming in from outside the neighborhood, the High Line is straightforward to reach. The A, C, and E trains serve 14th Street, and the 1 train runs to 18th and 23rd Streets. Parking is limited, as expected in Midtown West, but transit access is solid for both local and visiting attendees.
Spaces in this area range from compact boardrooms suited to four to eight people through to larger training rooms and workshop venues that can accommodate 20 or more. Common configurations you will find on Storefront in the High Line include:
Private boardrooms with AV equipment and whiteboards
Open-plan loft spaces that work well for workshops and creative sessions
Training rooms with tiered or classroom-style seating
Gallery-adjacent spaces that double as informal meeting areas
Most spaces are available by the half-day, full day, or on a multi-day basis. Pricing in this neighborhood typically runs from around $50 to $250 per hour depending on capacity, fit-out, and included amenities. Larger training rooms or full-floor formats can run higher for full-day bookings.
For a broader view of what is available across Meeting Space In New York, Storefront lists hundreds of options across every Manhattan neighborhood.
A few practical things are worth checking before you confirm a booking in this area. Natural light is a genuine differentiator here — many High Line spaces feature large windows or skylights that come with the converted-building territory. If that matters to your team, filter for it early.
AV setup varies significantly between spaces. Some rooms include a mounted screen, HDMI connections, and a conference call setup as standard. Others are bare and flexible, which suits workshop or training formats where you want to bring your own equipment. Check the listing details carefully or message the host directly if the spec is unclear.
Catering access is worth confirming for full-day bookings. The High Line has strong restaurant and cafe density along 9th and 10th Avenues, so external catering is straightforward to arrange even if the space does not provide it.
For comparison, Meeting Rooms in Financial District, New York tend to skew toward more traditional corporate fit-outs, while the High Line offers a more design-led environment. If your team is based further uptown, Meeting Rooms in East Harlem, New York may also be worth considering.
The High Line sits within the broader Chelsea neighborhood, and if your preferred dates are not available directly on the High Line, Chelsea as a whole has strong meeting room supply. The neighborhood runs from roughly 14th to 30th Street between 6th Avenue and the Hudson River, so walking distance between High Line addresses and wider Chelsea options is typically under ten minutes.
All Storefront bookings are confirmed directly with the host through the platform. There is no requirement to commit to long lease terms — spaces are available on the exact day or multi-day basis you need, which suits one-off team offsites, client workshops, quarterly planning sessions, and recurring training programs alike.
You can also explore Meeting Rooms in Alphabet City, New York or browse New York as a whole to compare across all five boroughs.
Meeting rooms on the High Line in New York typically cost between $50 and $250 per hour, depending on the size, fit-out, and included equipment. Compact boardrooms for four to six people sit at the lower end of that range. Larger training rooms or full-floor workshop spaces for 15 to 30 people will generally run higher, particularly for full-day bookings.
Yes. Storefront listings on the High Line are available on short-term terms, including half-day, full day, and multi-day bookings. There is no requirement to commit to a recurring lease. You book the dates you need directly through the platform.
The High Line area offers a range of formats, including private boardrooms, open loft spaces suited to workshops, training rooms with classroom-style layouts, and gallery-adjacent spaces for more informal sessions. The building stock in this part of Chelsea tends toward creative and design-led interiors, which distinguishes it from more traditional corporate meeting room supply elsewhere in Manhattan.
The High Line is a practical and distinctive choice for workshops and training days. It is well-served by the A, C, E, and 1 subway lines, has strong cafe and restaurant access for catering, and offers building stock that suits active, creative formats. Several spaces in the area are configured specifically for training use, with flexible seating arrangements and AV infrastructure.
A meeting room on the High Line typically refers to a smaller, enclosed space designed for focused discussion, client meetings, or team check-ins, usually seating 4 to 12 people. A workshop venue or training room is a larger, more flexible space designed for facilitated sessions, presentations, or hands-on activities, often accommodating 15 to 40 participants with rearrangeable furniture and more open floor area.
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