How Chinaโ€™s growing women-only communities offer safety, refuge and somewhere to socialise


Laughter erupts over a board game and coffee at a rural cottage in Chinaโ€™s eastern province of Zhejiang, one of a growing number of women-only co-living spaces far from social pressures and male judgment.

Women come to share mutual support and โ€œtalk freely about intimate stuffโ€, while others seek companionship or refuge from harassment, participants said after making steamed buns in a bright kitchen overlooking the mountains.

โ€œAn all-women environment makes me feel safe,โ€ said Zhang Wenjing, 43. โ€œAmong women, we talk more easily about certain things.โ€

Chen Fangyan, 28, felt less self-conscious without men around. โ€œNot being forced to wear a bra is already a kind of freedom.โ€

Demand for single-gender spaces โ€“ including bars, gyms, hostels and co-working hubs โ€“ has grown in China, as women flex increasing economic power to secure peace of mind and physical safety.

Chen Yani (in white T-shirt), also known as โ€œKekeโ€, plays a board game with other women at her female co-living space called Kekeโ€™s Imaginative Space in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Photo: AFP
Chen Yani (in white T-shirt), also known as โ€œKekeโ€, plays a board game with other women at her female co-living space called Kekeโ€™s Imaginative Space in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Photo: AFP

At Kekeโ€™s Imaginative Space, participants pay 30 yuan (US$4.20) a night, with costs going up to 80 yuan from the fourth day.

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