Company Culture
Business development / Jobs

Intuitive Company: web design firm leaves suburbs to open up shop in Manayunk [PHOTOS]

After three years in Bala Cynwyd, web design shop Intuitive Company needed a change. The team wanted a bigger space to accommodate its growth, a place with a city feel and lots of character, and of course, it had to be affordable. Enter: Manayunk. Now, it’s not the most obvious place for a web design […]

Inside Intuitive Company's new office. Photo courtesy of Inuitive Company.

Inside Intuitive Company’s new Manayunk office.

After three years in Bala Cynwyd, web design shop Intuitive Company needed a change.

The team wanted a bigger space to accommodate its growth, a place with a city feel and lots of character, and of course, it had to be affordable. Enter: Manayunk.

Now, it’s not the most obvious place for a web design company in Philly, but check out this space. High ceilings, an industrial feel and plenty of distractions (we are so jealous of the pool table). Character? For sure.

From left to right: designer Kyle Cook (foreground), relationship strategist David Naples (background), cofounder and Principal of Technology Greg Picarelli (background), Principal of Creative Sandy Greene (foreground)

Intuitive Company settled in an 8,500 sq.ft. studio in Manayunk’s newish Waterworks Building (read about it on PlanPhilly here), which, in a Philly-is-so-small twist, was developed by VITABand cofounder David Waxman.

Founded by Greg Picarelli and Tim McLaughlin in 2004, the shop has a staff of 25. Picarelli, 42, lives in Collegeville, Pa., while McLaughlin, 38, lives in Wynnewood, Pa.

 

Companies: Intuitive Company / VITABand
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Philly daily roundup: A better coffee supply chain; Philly Tech Week returns; Apply to Pennovation Accelerator

Philly daily roundup: Startups want office culture; New Venture Lab cohort; Penn Med's new AI leader

Will the life sciences dethrone software as the king of technology?

How a week in Philly may have changed the future for a medtech CEO

Technically Media