place

Arthaus (Philadelphia)

Residential skyscrapers in PhiladelphiaUse American English from November 2025
Arthaus j
Arthaus j

Arthaus is a 525 ft (160 m) tall modern luxury residential skyscraper located on 301 South Broad Street in Philadelphia. It was built in 2022 for an estimated cost of $253 million dollars and has 41 floors. As of November 2025 it is the 14th-tallest building in Philadelphia and the 22nd-tallest building in Pennsylvania. The building has 108 residential units and 36,000 sq ft of amenities including a fitness center, a rooftop greenhouse which is one of the first of its kind, a library, and an outdoor pool. There is also 4,200 sq ft of retail space at the ground floor. The building is located in the Avenue of the Arts District, and sits opposite from the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. The building was designed by Kohn Pederson Fox who designed other skyscrapers in Philadelphia like the BNY Mellon Center, Two Logan Square, and One Logan Square. This building was Kohn Pedersen Fox's first residential skyscraper in Philadelphia.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Arthaus (Philadelphia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Arthaus (Philadelphia)
South Broad Street, Philadelphia Center City

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Arthaus (Philadelphia)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.946388888889 ° E -75.164444444444 °
placeShow on map

Address

Broad Street Ministry

South Broad Street 315
19110 Philadelphia, Center City
Pennsylvania, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Arthaus j
Arthaus j
Share experience

Nearby Places

William Way LGBT Community Center
William Way LGBT Community Center

The William Way LGBT Community Center is a nonprofit organization serving the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender population of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and nearby communities, located at 1315 Spruce Street in Philadelphia in the Gayborhood.The community center was founded in 1975 as the Gay Community Center of Philadelphia. It purchased its current building at 1315 Spruce Street in 1997, and has owned it since local businessman Mel Heifetz paid off the center's mortgage in 2005.The center's programs include an extensive library, and programs in peer counseling, senior services, education, and arts and culture. The center also offers numerous 12-step meetings throughout the day and night. The center opened the Arcila-Adams Trans Resource Center in 2019 to centralize resources for trans people in Philadelphia. In 2021 the center collaborated with HIV/AIDS healthcare provider Philadelphia FIGHT to provide COVID-19 vaccines to LGBTQ people in Philadelphia.The center houses the John J. Wilcox, Jr. Archives, which collects and preserves local and regional LGBT documents and artifacts. The archive is one of the most important collections of LGBTQ documents and artifacts in the United States. Along with researchers from the ONE Archives in Los Angeles, archivists from the John J. Wilcox, Jr. Archives have been searching for unidentified men photographed at a gay wedding held in 1957. The search, which began in 2013 and is still ongoing, was covered in both LGBT and mainstream press.The western wall of the community center features Ann Northrup's block-long mural, "Pride & Progress", featuring images of Philadelphia's LGBT citizens over decades.Since 2010, the center's Executive Director is Chris Bartlett.