
© MFP
A new coworking hub for Luxembourg's civil servants has opened in Dudelange, with officials highlighting its potential to save both time and CO2 emissions.
On Wednesday afternoon in Dudelange, Minister of the Civil Service Serge Wilmes inaugurated Luxembourg's third coworking space for civil servants. The new hub, located in the CFL Multimodal Centre, offers 32 workstations and follows the openings of similar offices in Schieren in March 2024 and in Clervaux in May 2025.
The initiative targets some 4,600 civil servants living within a 40-kilometre radius of Dudelange, giving them the option to work closer to home and avoid the often congested commute to the capital.
"We are committed to offering our civil servants solutions to avoid long commutes by providing flexible and welcoming infrastructure", Minister Wilmes said.
Located at the junction of the A13 and A3 motorways and connected to Bettembourg station by bus, the coworking space could help save nearly 15 tonnes of CO2 emissions per year if fully used, according to official estimations.
The CFL management team, represented by Jeannot Waringo, chairman of the Board of Directors, Barbara Chevalier, director of Freight Operations, and Alain Blau, administrative and financial director, welcomed the collaboration: "We are very pleased to host the Ministry of Civil Service on our premises. Their commitment to reducing CO2 emissions by offering innovative workspaces is fully in line with our vision of a sustainable future. This is a wonderful collaboration based on shared values."
After Clervaux, Schieren, and now Dudelange, the coworking rollout will continue: a fourth site is set to open in Differdange in early 2026.
"We are promoting the development of modern ways of working and encouraging other administrations to implement innovative methods," Minister Wilmes added.