Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center occupies the top 12 floors of the Comcast Technology Center, a 1,201-foot Norman Foster tower that stands as the tallest building in Philadelphia. Opened in 2019, the hotel begins on the 48th floor and climbs to a 60th-floor sky lobby where a glowing onyx reception wall and Jeff Leatham's floral installations greet arriving guests. A monumental staircase flanked by black-stone water walls leads down to Jean-Georges Philadelphia on the 59th floor, a triple-height, three-sided glass dining room topped by a mirrored pyramid ceiling that multiplies skyline views from every seat. The 180 rooms and 39 suites are dressed in warm bronze tones with bespoke furniture designed by the Foster practice and Comcast's next-generation X1 entertainment built into every room. The Presidential Suite adds a fireplace, formal dining for ten with a service kitchen, and dual-corner windows facing north and south.
Jean-Georges Philadelphia is Michelin-starred chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten's first restaurant in the city, serving power breakfasts by morning and tasting menus by night. SkyHigh on the 60th floor offers casual Jean-Georges fare and cocktails at sunset. At street level, Vernick Fish, an Adam Tihany-designed modern seafood restaurant by James Beard winner Greg Vernick, spills onto the sidewalk, while Vernick Coffee Bar next door pairs a takeaway bakery with a 40-seat café. The Forbes Five Star spa on the 57th floor holds seven treatment rooms with healing crystals set into the walls, using Dr Burgener, Dr. Barbara Sturm and May Lindstrom lines. On the same floor, a 30,000-gallon indoor infinity-edge pool floats level with the skyline. Whether you arrive by Amtrak at 30th Street Station, where a hotel car meets you at the platform, or walk to Rittenhouse Square and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, this hotel starts and ends every day at the highest point in the city.