Marathon Trading

Corporate Headquarters

Radnor, PA

The 9,200 SF suite in Four Radnor Corporate Center, provides Marathon, a company in rapid growth, the space it needs now and flexibility for future expansion. The space features a central trading floor designed for collaboration and equipped with 28 trading desks. Other workspaces include two executive offices, two private offices, and two shared offices with multiple workstations. A 6-person conference room and a 10-person conference room.

Project Details:

The front of the suite contains an open floor plan with spaces for dining, congregating and recreation, including a kitchen with a food delivery drop-off area, a fitness room, and a billiards table and a poker table. Meyer provided strategic branding solutions throughout the space, from logo signage and a mural of the Philadelphia skyline to an art wall of a bull with an American flag or frosted glass marked with undulating red marks reminiscent of a stock chart.

“We were proud to be part of the team that brought Marathon’s new office to life,” said Meyer Principal Chris Scarafile. “By designing a versatile, people-focused space with unique features custom-suited to their daily needs, we’ve created a workspace aligned with their growth goals.”

“We’re a company in growth mode, and this new space reflects and accommodates that,” said Marathon Executive Vice President of Growth & Strategy Brian Gilbert. “Between the central trading floor, shared spaces, and branding throughout, the new office really feels built for us.”
In addition to Chris Scarafile, the Meyer team included Senior Interior Designer Giselle Hipkins; Interior Designer Paige Angelus; Experiential Graphic Designer Bara Hrusinska; and Furniture Solutions Manager Meredith Mercatante.

Additional project partners included CRESA (Project Management) D&R Construction (Construction Management), and COFCO (Furniture).

Checkmark icon Guiding Principles
Foster collaboration through shared spaces
Flexible spaces for daily needs
Strong focus on brand identity
Human-centric design