Sunlight angles through the floor-to-ceiling glass at the 31st floor, catching the warm tones of hardwood-style flooring and spreading across an open layout that makes 911 square feet feel genuinely expansive. The living area breathes. There is room for a proper sofa, a dining table set for company, and still enough open space that the apartment never feels like a puzzle you are constantly solving. Recessed lighting keeps the ceiling clean, and a ceiling fan draws the eye upward while keeping the air moving on warm Philadelphia evenings. The kitchen is positioned to be part of the conversation, not hidden from it. Upgraded countertops give you a real prep surface, and the stainless steel appliances — refrigerator, dishwasher, stove, microwave, and self-cleaning oven — are arranged for the way people actually cook. The disposal handles cleanup quietly, and the whole space has the kind of finish that makes weeknight dinners feel a little more intentional. When the meal is done, the in-unit washer and dryer are tucked away and ready for the kind of domestic rhythm that a laundromat trip used to interrupt. The bedroom is generous enough to accommodate a king, a dresser, and still have breathing room — and the walk-in closet handles the rest. It is an entry-level bedroom arrangement within the unit, meaning no stairs to negotiate in the dark. The bathroom is clean and complete, and the overall flow of the apartment rewards the kind of slow Sunday morning that a 31st-floor perch invites. Then there is everything else the building brings. The fitness center means your workout is a short elevator ride away, not a separate commute. The rooftop deck is the kind of amenity that earns its reputation — sunsets over Center City from that elevation are something Philadelphia residents talk about. There is a pool for warmer months, a clubhouse and game room for evenings that call for something social, and a meeting room when working from home means you need a proper table and a door that closes. Concierge service handles the friction that city living sometimes generates, and gated access with on-site security means the building takes its responsibility to residents seriously. Parking is available in the garage, which anyone who has circled Rittenhouse Square on a rainy night will understand is not a small thing. Pets are welcome here — cats and dogs both — which means the four-legged members of the household are not an afterthought. Rittenhouse Square itself, one of Philadelphia's most celebrated public spaces, sits within easy reach and doubles as the city's most agreeable dog-walking destination at any hour. The neighborhood around 1500 Locust is Rittenhouse Square at its most layered: established restaurants and newer arrivals, boutiques that have been here for decades alongside the kind of café that opened last season and already has a line. Broad Street and the Avenue of the Arts are close, the energy of South Broad mingles with the quieter residential blocks just west, and the density of walkable options in every direction is the kind of thing that takes a few weeks of living here to fully absorb. This is one of Philadelphia's most enduring addresses, and from the 31st floor, the city makes its case every single day. 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.