Collaborative workspaces are rapidly evolving around the world and coworking is now a global phenomenon, based on a number of shared values such as openness, community, accessibility etc. During the last few years, we have observed the emergence of profit-driven, commercialized spaces, such as incubators, accelerators and big coworking chains. On the other hand, there is an emergence of bottom-up, community-led spaces, such as coworking spaces, hackerspaces, makerspaces, hubs etc., territorializing ‘loose’ communities of professionals, freelancers and small and social enterprises driven by desires related to alternatives modes of organizing production through the collaborative use of common pool resources and new, hybrid labour (re)arrangements. This paper contributes to the ongoing debate concerning collaborative workspaces’ capacities and potentialities to operate as commons, by proposing an extended topology of collaborative networks, involving both the “core” components of the coworking praxis and those components’ interactions with broader networks and circuits (capitalist markets, urban commons, social movements etc.). We argue that through the lens of Assemblage Theory, the proposed topology overcomes restricting dualisms and taxonomies, allowing an inclusive description and evaluation of those recently emerged modes of labour organization and production. Moreover, we employ the autonomist lens of the commons theory, in order to place emphasis upon the collaborative assemblages’ potentiality to constitute a paradigm shift concerning the organization of labour, operating in tense with the capital, as a transformative force in favour of coworkers.