A PLACE TO WRITE HOME ABOUT
Baltimore magazine|June/July 2020
The fancy trappings of luxury apartments and condos beckon a special breed.
ALICE SHAPIN
A PLACE TO WRITE HOME ABOUT

AFTER LIVING IN D.C. while advising Barack Obama on domestic policy, 38-year old Jason Green was looking to relocate. Green, who holds a Yale University law degree and has always had an interest in community empowerment strategies, had been doing related work in Detroit, and saw a lot of the same activity happening in Baltimore. “Both areas have a powerful spirit, an energy, and people investing in the city,” he says. “It made me want to live in Baltimore. And since I didn’t know anyone in the area, I was looking for a place that offered me a community.” Green, who recently co-founded Skillsmart, a specialized recruiting firm, chose 414 Light Street, a new luxury rental.

And like many of the high-end apartments and condos that have been popping up in the metro area in recent years, it had everything he needed, and then some.

As an example, the 7th floor has 40,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor recreation amenity space where residents can sunbathe at the rooftop pool, have an evening meal in the alfresco kitchen, watch movies on the 16-foot dual-sided movie screen, or work out at the 4,000-square-foot fitness center.

“The fitness center is so incredible that I gave up my gym membership,” says Green. And since so many people work from home— and even more are expected to in the wake of the coronavirus—Baltimore’s luxury residences have provided common areas for them, too. There’s also a space where you can hold a meeting.

This story is from the June/July 2020 edition of Baltimore magazine.

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This story is from the June/July 2020 edition of Baltimore magazine.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.