in
Center City Philadelphia The cast lived in a building at 249-251
Arch Street at 3rd Street in the
Old City Philadelphia section of
Philadelphia at (). The , three-story building, which is adjacent to the
Betsy Ross House, was built in 1902, and was known as the Union Bank of Philadelphia Building until 1970, when it was sold to Seamen's Church Institute to house global seafarers. It was placed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places in January 1977, and purchased in 2003 by Yaron Properties, Inc for $2.2 million USD. An additional $3 million was spent on renovating and furnishing the building for production of the series, which included 42 mounted cameras for filming. The interior was designed by Norm Dodge of Norm Dodge & Associates. In March 2004, producers ceased construction after completing two thirds of the project, and announced they were leaving Philadelphia because of disputes with Philadelphia trade unions. Joey Carson, CEO of
Bunim/Murray, and Ted Kenney, a producer on
The Real World, met in private over a two-week period with the trade unions. The meetings were brokered by Mayor
John F. Street, Governor
Ed Rendell, Congressman
Bob Brady, and other civic leaders in order to keep the production in Philadelphia. The flap delayed renovations by several weeks. The interior decorations used for the series remained until as late as October 2004. Since filming ended, the building has served as an art gallery for The Art Institutes of Philadelphia's F.U.E.L. Collection and has become an office for
Linode since late 2015. ==Cast==