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Those McMansions are Buckhead? ROFL! How can anyone call it "city"? And why do you equate wealth with city? One characteristic of a true city is diversity of incomes.
Did you even read through the thread, or are you just spouting off?
And it most certainly is the City, as in it's a SECTION of Atlanta that happens to be very desirable. It does not equal the entire City however, so your wealth remark is a moot point.
The McMansions shown were not built on raw land, they replaced more modest homes. There are also huge historic estates, dozens of highrise condos & apartments, rowhomes, townhouses, cluster homes, etc. This is a mature area that has been built out for years. New construction has to replace old in this part of town.
There is little to no grit however, so I can understand how some simply can't wrap their minds around this beautiful style of urban living. And it IS urban, McMansions or not.
I understand why you wanted to compare the two.
You wanted to see if a suburb can stack up to the urbanity of an ATL neighborhood. Hoboken is just to small of a city land wise to make the comparison fair. A commute from Hoboken to Jersey City is most likely the same, if not a shorter distance one would travel within Buckhead borders to get to their workplace. Everyone rather bash and argue than be fair and notice the thriving city life in Hoboken. Hoboken has more nightlife packed inside one area- not office space. It's a different kind of city living in Hoboken, people don't want to understand that.
Where people work shouldn't be the topic of discussion. That's just a way to drive the topic into a complete mayhem of stubbornness.
Most People in Hoboken have a 10-20 minute commute, if not less. The commute time for most in Buckhead is most likely similar. Access and public transportation is just another branch of "city living", and Hoboken has it.
not to mention I also learned that Silver Spring is the best city living in the country
Did you even read through the thread, or are you just spouting off?
And it most certainly is the City, as in it's a SECTION of Atlanta that happens to be very desirable. It does not equal the entire City however, so your wealth remark is a moot point.
The McMansions shown were not built on raw land, they replaced more modest homes. There are also huge historic estates, dozens of highrise condos & apartments, rowhomes, townhouses, cluster homes, etc. This is a mature area that has been built out for years. New construction has to replace old in this part of town.
There is little to no grit however, so I can understand how some simply can't wrap their minds around this beautiful style of urban living. And it IS urban, McMansions or not.
and i cant quite put my finger on how grit adds to vibrance, but you do have me thinking
and just to reinforce. also the intent of the thread was to acknowledge that Buckhead is urban/city living, as it was the comparator
in hind sight I should have maybe choosen a neighborhood like society hill or old city in philly to compare to hoboken, also a bedroom community as no real job center exists in the neighborhood, plus it may have mittigated some of this - they are more similar in composition
not to mention I also learned that Silver Spring is the best city living in the country
That's why I originally thought Silver Spring and Buckhead is a better match up. Hoboken can compare to SS in terms of nightlife and access (Hoboken/NYC - SS/DC), but it's mere size land wise is just too big of an obstacle to have people converse with a fair/open attitude.
and i cant quite put my finger on how grit adds to vibrance, but you do have me thinking
and just to reinforce. also the intent of the thread was to acknowledge that Buckhead is urban/city living, as it was the comparator
in hind sight I should have maybe choosen a neighborhood like society hill or old city in philly to compare to hoboken, also a bedroom community as no real job center exists in the neighborhood, plus it may have mittigated some of this - they are more similar in composition
Those McMansions are Buckhead? ROFL! How can anyone call it "city"? And why do you equate wealth with city? One characteristic of a true city is diversity of incomes.
LMAO ummm you do know what a McMansion is, since your using it? McMansions refer to large new suburban homes, cookie cooker if you will, affordable for the middle class. Infact if they were McMansions they would actually be for more of a diverse range of incomes, so you don't even makes sense ROFL.
I did not equate wealth with a city, I equate the jobs, the commercial, industrial activity and how much people comunte to that location for work, vs a suburb in which people leave. This isn't the subjectiveness of a "true city" it's literally what a city is. You didn't read my post, you just looked at the pictures and replied back with taking points that contradicts your own statment. By the way density is more expensive, so this is also another example of contradicting yourself.
tere was intention to confine access at a border but what is afforded but residing in a location, Buckhead has access to other parts of Atlanta too
KONY - would you agree that Hoboken offers pretty similar if not better access to much of Manhatan when compared to many neighborhoodsin the Bronx?
If we would go by access than of course hoboken would win. Thats not even a reasonable thread. In the spirit of city vs city i thought, as well as other posters, that you were just trying to compare the two city propers. Ny has nothing to do with Hoboken other than being close by. Theres plenty of states and cities thats close to each other in the US.
As far as hoboken having better access than the bronx, i would have to say no. The bronx has more ways to manhattan and better transportation ,be it bus or train, than most US cities. The bronx is also the closest piece of land to Manhattan. You can walk to manhattan from the bronx
And natives of the city really don't pride themselves over how close or far they are to Manhattan. That normally comes from outsiders and transplants
The first 28 photos are part of Buckhead. They're a couple years old so the buildings under construction have been completed and some other buildings. Buckhead is really growing fast. That's one of the things so exciting about it.
Read it again- Hoboken has more in one square mile than any 1 square mile in Buckhead.
Pick a square mile in Buckhead and compare that to Hoboken (the 1 square mile city). THAT WOULD BE FAIR
.
Not sure. But I would think it would be safe to say that this about one square mile stretch of property along Peachtree in Buckhead probably has as much to offer as all of Hoboken.
buckhead has a much bigger skyline and is modern and fancy. but i love the hoboken brownstones and density.
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