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Tucked into one of Rittenhouse Square's most storied addresses, this one-bedroom residence on the fourth floor of a 1930 landmark carries the kind of quiet confidence that comes from nearly a century of well-built bones. The building has aged the way great things do — with character intact and purpose renewed — and stepping off the elevator into the corridor, you already sense that what waits behind the door is something worth settling into. The kitchen anchors the experience. Upgraded countertops extend generously across the workspace, giving you room to spread out a cutting board, rest a coffee carafe, and still have counter left over for the morning paper. Stainless steel appliances — refrigerator with ice maker, stove, self-cleaning oven, microwave, range hood, and dishwasher — line the space with a cohesive, well-appointed quality that makes cooking feel intentional rather than incidental. The disposal keeps cleanup effortless, and at just over a thousand square feet, the open floor plan lets the kitchen breathe directly into the living area without a wall cutting the energy of the room in half. You can be at the stove, stirring something slow and fragrant, and still be part of the conversation happening across the room. The bedroom is generously proportioned, fitted with a walk-in closet that quietly solves the storage equation most city apartments never do. Window treatments are already in place, so your first morning here, the light behaves exactly as you want it to. In-unit washer and dryer mean laundry is a background errand rather than a logistical event — a small thing that changes a week considerably. Beyond the apartment itself, the building delivers. A concierge greets the day alongside you and keeps the building running with a professionalism that matters more than it sounds on paper. The fitness center is there for the mornings you want to stay in rather than walk out. A game room and meeting room serve the range of hours and moods a full life requires. When the weather cooperates — and in Philadelphia, it cooperates beautifully from spring through fall — the roof deck becomes a genuine extension of your living space, with views that remind you exactly why 1616 Walnut exists where it does. There is also a picnic area for slower afternoons, and the garage means a car, if you have one, is never a problem. The building welcomes pets, so if a dog or cat is part of the household, that is accounted for here too. Rittenhouse Square itself is practically a backyard. The park anchors a neighborhood where independent restaurants, longtime residents, and newer arrivals have built something genuinely mixed and alive. Neighbors recognize each other at the wine shop and the corner café. The kinds of places that have been on the same block for twenty years sit comfortably next to the ones that opened recently, and neither feels out of place. It is a neighborhood with an identity that does not need to be manufactured, which in a city as layered as Philadelphia is saying something. And when the city calls beyond the square, it answers quickly. Walnut Street puts you within easy reach of Center City's transit corridors, making the rest of Philadelphia — and points well beyond it — straightforwardly accessible without a car ever entering the equation. Pricing and availability subject to change on a daily basis. Photos are of model units. Parking may be available subject to availability and may be an additional fee.
Source: BRIGHT MLS, MLS#: PAPH2618528
