When Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer came to the Dumbo neighborhood of Brooklyn in December, every sight, structure and storefront seemed to remind them of the formative days of “Broad City.” There was the waterfront where, more than a decade ago, they would sit and imagine what the future held for them. There were the former offices of Lifebooker, the defunct beauty-and-lifestyle bargain website, where they worked intermittently while they wrote the earliest episodes of the “Broad City” online series over Gchat.

Those days of striving and subsisting are long gone for them. Jacobson, 34, and Glazer, 31, are not just the creators and stars of “Broad City,” the Comedy Central series that puts an antic, absurdist spin on their coming-of-age adventures; they’re members of the entertainment establishment. They present at prestigious awards shows, appear in tributes to their comedy foremothers; and have no shortage of solo projects. Jacobson writes books (like her recent memoir, “I Might Regret This”) and stars on Netflix’s “Disenchantment,” and Glazer performs stand-up comedy and appears in films like “Rough Night.”

They can’t pretend to be who they aren’t anymore, and so, the coming season of “Broad City,” which makes its debut on Jan. 24, will be its last. On a break from editing some of the final episodes, Jacobson and Glazer explained their decision to end the series on their own terms, talked about the making of the final season and looked forward to life — as collaborators and friends — without the show.

These are edited excerpts from that conversation.

As we speak, you’re not quite done with your work on “Broad City,” but how does it feel to be very nearly done with the show?