'Shark Tank' investor Daymond John is building an entrepreneur hub in a 14-story New York high-rise
Daymond John
Daymond John

(Daymond John at the Blueprint + co offices in New York City.Nathan Lee)

In early February, Daymond John was preparing to launch his latest company, his spin on a coworking space he named Blueprint + co.

He's looking to the future: Going forward, the business could allow the Shark Tank investor to leverage the influence he's established over the last eight years as a "Shark" long after the series, or his participation in it, inevitably ends.

A few days before the Blueprint launch, Business Insider stopped by the 17,000-square-foot space filled with new office furniture as contractors with power tools wrapped up small projects.

Blueprint comprises the two top floors and a 3,000-square-foot roof deck in a 14-floor high-rise in Manhattan's Garment Distric. It can hold 150 employees or 300 people total, for special events. Downstairs is John's company The Shark Group, formerly known as Shark Branding, a small business he founded during the second season of "Shark Tank" when he realized he needed to formalize management of his growing portfolio of investments.

Since John moved into this building a year ago, he's seen it as an evolving home base, with the perk of having a beautiful view of the Empire State Building. It's a place where he can develop his own businesses and foster relationships with entrepreneurs, both upstarts and veterans.

He has lofty ambitions for the location, telling us that he wants his center to be like the old MTV Times Square studio, where musicians, celebrities, and producers were always making exciting entertainment in the heart of the city — except his will be all around entrepreneurship.

"We're taking the whole building by the time we're done," John said.

From FUBU to Shark

In 2008, John was 39 years old and ready for a change.

He had achieved notoriety and wealth through his clothing brand FUBU, which he started from nothing out of his mother's house in Hollis, Queens in 1992. Though it brought in over $300 million in revenue at its peak, its popularity faded in the early 2000s. He contracted himself as a marketing adviser and acquired stakes in about 10 clothing companies, but after the Great Recession hit, only a couple were actually bringing him money.

So when famed reality television producer Mark Burnett told John that he wanted him to be a founding cast member of "Shark Tank" — an American version of the international series "Dragon's Den" — in which he would invest in small businesses that convinced him they were worthy of his money, John thought it would be a great idea.

It would not only bring him back into the spotlight, but it would allow him to move beyond the clothing industry.