Tucked into the fifth floor of one of Fishtown's newest addresses, this one-bedroom, one-bathroom residence offers something worth pausing over — 508 square feet arranged with genuine intention, where an open floor plan makes every inch feel purposeful rather than cramped. The kitchen sits at the heart of it all, outfitted with stainless steel appliances, upgraded countertops, a dishwasher, and a self-cleaning oven that handles the aftermath of a Sunday dinner without complaint. An ice maker and microwave round out a setup designed for the way people actually cook — and the way they sometimes choose not to. The living space flows naturally from the kitchen, open and unobstructed, with window treatments already in place so the light works on your schedule. The bedroom is positioned for quiet, fitted with a walk-in closet that earns its name, giving you the kind of storage that makes unpacking feel like settling in rather than making do. A full bathroom completes the layout, and an in-unit washer and dryer means laundry happens on your timeline, not the building's. Step outside your door and the building's amenities begin to feel less like perks and more like extensions of how you live. The fitness center is there for the early-morning session before the neighborhood wakes up. The roof deck offers the kind of evening unwinding that Fishtown's skyline makes genuinely cinematic — the kind of place where you bring a drink, stay longer than planned, and leave in a better mood than you arrived. A clubhouse and meeting room offer space when your apartment isn't quite the right setting for a gathering or a focused work session. A picnic area and dog park round out the outdoor spaces, and elevator access keeps the fifth-floor commute easy. Pets are welcome here — cats and dogs alike — with a size, weight, and breed restriction in place, and a limit on the number of animals per home. Outside, Fishtown itself is the amenity that no building brochure can fully capture. The neighborhood's dining corridor brings you coffee shops that take their craft seriously, neighborhood bars that feel like they've been there forever even when they haven't, and restaurants ranging from corner-casual to genuinely destination-worthy. Girard Avenue and Frankford Avenue between them offer the kind of retail and dining mix that makes running errands feel less like a chore and more like a neighborhood loop worth taking. The stretch of independent shops, bakeries, and eateries that define this part of Philadelphia has made Fishtown one of the most talked-about neighborhoods in the city, and this address puts you at the middle of it rather than on the edges. When the day calls for somewhere beyond the neighborhood, the Market-Frankford Line and nearby bus routes connect you to Center City and beyond with the kind of directness that makes owning a car feel optional rather than essential. The elevated platform at Berks or the York-Dauphin stop keeps commuting straightforward, the city folding open from here in every direction. 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.