“…The literature review conducted for this paper on the phenomenon 'co-location' shows that business co-location has been studied in previous research. Even if economic theories indirectly or directly has discussed the phenomenon, the concept has most explicitly been studied from a context of cluster theories (Cooke, 2002;McKelvey et al, 2003;Stuart and Sorenson, 2003;Yeung et al, 2006;Porter et al, 2006;Robinson et al, 2007), Ecosystems/ Network theories (Lemarie´et al, 2001;Gertler and Levitte, 2005;Vanhaverbeke, 2005;Gallivan, 2008;Muegge, 2013;Romero and Molina, 2011;and Valkokari et al, 2017), Learning and Knowledge dissemination (Nonaka, 1994;Inkpen and Tsang, 2005;Simard and West, 2005;Song et al, 2007;Zenun et al, 2007;Chow and Chan, 2008;and Holste and Fields, 2010) and Corporate co-working/collaboration spaces (Bouncken et al, 2016;Ca-bral and van Winden, 2016;Cabral and van Winden, 2018;Nagy and Lindsay, 2018;Irving et al, 2019). Below, some interesting findings will be presented from these streams of research.…”