Key Points
Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia just unveiled Sky Garden, a new floor with eight accommodations featuring curated art, along with access to custom wellness experiences and dining.
Sky Garden includes four guest rooms, three suites, and a two-bedroom penthouse; amenities include fireplaces, in-suite laundry, full kitchens, and pantries for extended stays.
Later this year, the hotel will introduce a music butler, who will curate vinyl selections for guests in the Sky Terrace Penthouse Suite and Sky Terrace Suite.
One of Philadelphia’s best hotels is expanding.
Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center just unveiled Sky Garden, a new residential-style floor with eight accommodations, including an expansive two-bedroom penthouse.
Set on the 45th floor, Sky Garden also features four guest rooms, two one-bedroom suites, and a two-bedroom suite. Each offers dining experiences available exclusively to guests of the floor.
“Sky Garden was born from a desire to create a deeply personal sanctuary above the city—an environment that prioritizes calm over spectacle and intimacy over scale,” says Cornelia Samara, the hotel’s regional vice president and general manager.

Joe Thomas/Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Sculptural design in a Sky Terrace Suite.
Conceived by interior design studio 1508 London, the new spaces feature warm tones and natural materials, and some have fireplaces and in-suite laundry. Working with art consultancy firm Hanabi: Art and Artists, the design team curated a collection that reflects Philadelphia’s artistic legacy and showcases works by local and international artists. References to Philadelphia-born artist Alexander Calder’s legacy appear throughout, from the fluid lines of custom metalwork to the geometric art in guest suites.
Guests of the Sky Terrace Suite and Sky Terrace Penthouse can dine privately with menus curated by the teams of the hotel’s acclaimed restaurants, Vernick Fish and Jean-Georges Philadelphia. The experience swaps out trolley service and silver-domed plates for multicourse meals at an expansive dining table or intimate dinners on the terrace, with a backdrop of the city skyline. Some accommodations also include full kitchens and butler’s pantries for travelers who are entertaining guests.

Joe Thomas/Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
A Sky Garden room.
Sky Garden guests can book treatments in an on-floor wellness suite and incorporate higher-tech add-ons like infrared sauna blankets and red-light therapy. The 4,000-square-foot Sky Terrace Penthouse goes a step further with a private studio equipped with a Peloton bike, Echelon Reflect fitness mirror, and Technogym bench.
Later this year, the hotel will expand Sky Garden’s cultural programming with a music butler, who will curate vinyl selections for guests in the Sky Terrace Penthouse Suite and Sky Terrace Suite.

Joe Thomas/Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Seating on the terrace of the Sky Terrace Penthouse Suite.
“Sky Garden’s timing feels right as travelers increasingly seek spaces that feel private, purposeful, and restorative,” Samara says. “Sky Garden elevates our offering by introducing a new standard of luxury in Philadelphia—one that feels like home, yet offers the sophistication and service synonymous with Four Seasons.”
Nightly rates at the Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center Sky Garden start from $1,200, and you can book your stay at fourseasons.com.
Read the original article on Travel & Leisure