Office-sharing startup WeWork on Tuesday announced a deal to buy Meetup, an online social network devoted to organizing real-world activities based on common interests.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but news website Axios cited a source as saying it was valued at about $200 million.
New York-based Meetup has grown to 35 million members since it launched in June of 2002, according to WeWork.
Meetup "was born from a simple but powerful idea: use the internet to get people off the internet," WeWork co-founder and chief executive Adam Neumann said in a blog post.
WeWork last month also revealed a deal to buy the oldest luxury department store in the US, as the shifting retail landscape yielded ground to the booming sharing economy.
The startup announced it is buying Lord & Taylor's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan in a joint venture with Rhone Capital.
Since launching in New York seven years ago, WeWork says it has grown into a network of more than 150,000 members in some 160 locations around the world.
In August, it announced that Japan's SoftBank Group had made a $4.4 billion investment in the company.
WeWork—which offers warehouse-style shared workspace to smaller companies, primarily tech startups—is expected to use the massive investment by SoftBank to expand its global presence.
Explore further: SoftBank invests $4.4 bn in shared offices firm WeWork