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Built in 1927 and reborn for modern living, this one-bedroom residence at 4247 Locust Street carries the kind of quiet character that newer construction simply cannot manufacture. The bones of a nearly century-old building — the proportions, the rhythm of the floor plan, the sense that these walls have stories — pair here with the comforts a contemporary renter expects, creating a home that feels both grounded and genuinely livable. At seven hundred square feet, the layout earns every inch. An open floor plan keeps the kitchen, dining, and living areas connected without feeling compressed, so whether you are cooking a weeknight dinner or spreading out with work on a Saturday morning, the space moves with you rather than against you. The kitchen is outfitted with stainless steel appliances — refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave, and disposal among them — so the everyday mechanics of cooking and cleaning stay efficient and uncluttered. The bedroom is entry-level accessible and anchored by a walk-in closet that quietly solves the storage problem before it starts. Spruce Hill is a neighborhood in conversation with itself right now, and Locust Street is near the center of that dialogue. Established rowhouses and century-old apartment buildings sit alongside newer arrivals — cafés finding their footing, small businesses opening their doors, the slow accumulation of energy that marks a neighborhood mid-transformation. The leafy residential blocks carry a sense of permanence, while the commercial corridors running through University City hum with the kind of activity that keeps daily life interesting without ever feeling exhausting. A short walk in nearly any direction lands you somewhere worth being. The building itself adds a layer of daily ease that matters more than it sounds until you actually live it. A gated community provides a sense of enclosure and calm. An elevator means the third-floor groceries are never a project. A fitness center removes one more logistical reason not to work out. When the day calls for something lighter, the game room offers a change of scenery without leaving the building. For residents who work from home or need a dedicated space for a call or small gathering, a meeting room is available on-site. Laundry is handled within the community, and parking is available on the lot — a detail that anyone who has circled West Philadelphia blocks on a Tuesday evening will not take lightly. Pets are part of the picture here. Both cats and dogs are welcome, subject to breed restrictions and a required deposit, and a dedicated dog park means your four-legged roommate gets their own amenity too. What daily life looks like from inside Unit 6 is something like this: morning light finding its way into an open layout, coffee made in a kitchen where everything works and nothing is missing, an evening walk through blocks that always seem to have something new worth noticing, and a return home to a building that feels secure, maintained, and genuinely cared for. The 1927 address is not an artifact — it is an asset, a reminder that the best places to live tend to be the ones that were built to last. 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.
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