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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:33 PM
 
10 posts, read 13,219 times
Reputation: 12
Default Battle of the Great Lakes: Cleveland, Detroit, Toronto, or Pittsburgh

Which Great Lakes city dominates?

Categories:

Theater
Weather
Food
Tourism
Diversity
Waterfront
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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:36 PM
 
Location: Chicago
31,950 posts, read 41,791,047 times
Reputation: 18790
Would it be unsporting to point out that Pittsburgh is not a Great Lakes city?

In this list, Toronto is the Ferrari against a Ford, a Dodge and a Yugo.
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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:37 PM
 
10 posts, read 13,219 times
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Default In general

When I say Great Lakes, I mean the actual region and all the comparable regions around it. I apologize for not being specific.

Also, let's not rule out all of the other options. It pays to consider every city for certain qualities. That is why I've attached the list of certain qualities to look for in each city (theater, food, etc.).
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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:45 PM
 
Location: Chicago
31,950 posts, read 41,791,047 times
Reputation: 18790
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfrrl View Post
When I say Great Lakes, I mean the actual region and all the comparable regions around it. I apologize for not being specific.
Pittsburgh is still the odd man out on this list. It is the crossroads of several regions (Northeast, Appalachia, Rust Belt, etc.) that make it distinctly different from more clearly defined Great Lakes cities.
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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:48 PM
 
10 posts, read 13,219 times
Reputation: 12
Default Actually...

There are many characteristics that Pittsburgh shares with the others (cost of living, weather, dining, and location). Pittsburgh may have a different feel and terrain, but that certainly doesn't isolate it from the Great Lakes. It is only 2 hours from cities within the region (Akron, Cleveland, Erie).
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Unread 09-22-2010, 09:58 PM
 
Location: Chicago
31,950 posts, read 41,791,047 times
Reputation: 18790
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfrrl View Post
There are many characteristics that Pittsburgh shares with the others (cost of living, weather, dining, and location). Pittsburgh may have a different feel and terrain, but that certainly doesn't isolate it from the Great Lakes. It is only 2 hours from cities within the region (Akron, Cleveland, Erie).
And it's still not a great Lakes city.

Indianapolis is only two hours from Lake Michigan. Columbus is only two hours from Lake Erie. Does that make them Great Lakes cities? If so, you'd be the first I know of to say so.
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Unread 09-23-2010, 07:24 AM
 
Location: Chicago, IL
1,724 posts, read 1,945,208 times
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Pittsburgh is not a Great Lakes City. And Toronto is far above these other cities, as well as much more expensive.
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Unread 09-23-2010, 08:04 AM
Status: "It's all fun and games until someone ends up in a cone" (set 3 days ago)
 
Location: NOT Ohio
19,303 posts, read 19,834,710 times
Reputation: 26109
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfrrl View Post
When I say Great Lakes, I mean the actual region and all the comparable regions around it.
Phew! I thought maybe Pittsburgh had somehow migrated north when I wasn't looking. What a relief ...

But it's still not a Great Lakes city by any stretch of the imagination.
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Unread 09-23-2010, 09:45 AM
 
Location: Twinsburg, OH
459 posts, read 454,234 times
Reputation: 194
I can somewhat understand why you included Pittsburgh in there (similar to Cleveland), but if this is the "Battle of the Great Lakes," then why is Chicago and Milwaukee excluded?
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Unread 09-23-2010, 09:50 AM
Status: "It's all fun and games until someone ends up in a cone" (set 3 days ago)
 
Location: NOT Ohio
19,303 posts, read 19,834,710 times
Reputation: 26109
Or Buffalo? Among others.
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