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I guess you see what you are looking for. Detroit metro is far prettier than many other cities. It is very green here. Most cities and towns have streams, lakes or rivers that actually have water in them. Wildlife is everywhere. Trees are everywhere. The area is filled with quaint small towns with old fashioned downtowns.
Yes there are a lot fo suburbs that are just sprawl. However that are a lot of suburbs that are beautiful. It depends on which ones you look at. Even the sprawl suburbs are prettier than most other City's sprawl suburbs because of the trees, grass, and water everywhere. |
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Live Local Search - Colorado Springs sprawl |
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Old North Saint Louis What's New in Old North They restore old homes and buildings a little at a time, with help from the organizations listed above and donations from citizens and online. Here's a slideshow of some of their work. YouTube - Old North St. Louis Revitalization in Progress Obviously, there's a long way to go, but work is being done. Unfortunately, in some areas of North St. Louis there are still blocks where there should be at least a dozen houses and there are 1 or 2 left. But it's improving. And, since ONSLRG was formed, there has been an explosion of loft and retail developments in downtown, a lot of it still ongoing. The city is much more attractive than it was in the early 80s through the 90s. Can Detroit not do something like this? Can citizens not get together and put their heads together? Even if they don't have a lot of money to invest in this, if they can put their money together and possibly get some sponsorship, surely something can be done. Missouri has tax credits for historic buildings and I believe Michigan does as well. If these buildings in North St. Louis can be saved surely some of the homes in Detroit can be saved. And there has been a slight migration back to the cities across the U.S. Detroit needs to take advantage of it, as does every city. I'll admit, I've never been to Detroit, but surely something can be done to restore these historic buildings. Usually these historic buildings are more solidly built than their newer cookie-cutter counterparts. And often old homes have a character that new homes don't have. Even townhomes (in St. Louis) that look similar usually have slightly different colors, decorations, and roofs. Why tear down when you can restore? |
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There is no city that is pretty to me, they are all equally ugly. I hate so much cement and pollution and so many cars and etc, etc.........Give me small towns and wide open spaces
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Please tell me if there is something wrong with me!!!! Why does everyone think Chicago is so beautiful?? I know from the area, I'm really not being a "grass is greener on the other side" but come on! I don't get it. Maybe I'm just too much of a nature and history guy who thinks if there aren't structures that pre-date the civil war, mountains, or rugged, natural ocean coastline, then the city has nothing unique enough that can't be replicated. Am I ignorant about architecture? Why is anything Chicago have, architecture-wise so special. I've seen pictures. The older buildings of downtown Chicago look like what Detroit has. The newer ones look like what Houston or Dallas have. Can someone please set the story once and for all why in the world Chicago would be considered so beautiful architecturally?? Am I just ignorant?? |
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() No Southern city has that same feeling. Last edited by magellan; 03-03-2008 at 09:35 PM.. |
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I am from Cincinnati and I have lived in Detroit for 4 years. There is NO COMPARISION what so ever...Detroit has more urban decay then any city I have ever seen. Not to bash Detroit...It has a ton of potential but just has a corrupt mayor that can't get 'er done... |
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In 1893, Chicago would host the world's fair, which came to be known as the White City, which was an inspiration for the song America the Beautiful (a good thriller novel set in the fair is Devil in the White City). The Fair would basically make neo-classical architecture the style of choice in the US for 50 years. The designers are a virtual who's who: Olmstead, Burnham, McKim, Hunt, Sullivan, etc. Chicago would build the first "skyscraper" in 1895 and go from there. As a Chicago native, I think it's overrated in some ways, especially among the metro Detroit youth, but one place it is underrated if anything is in its architecture. Capiche? ![]() |
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Chicago's beautiful, but every city has some beautiful parts.
I find most cities beautiful in some ways. St. Louis can be beautiful, too, but on a smaller scale: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Thanks to Urban St. Louis - View Forum - Photography - Showcase St. Louis for the pictures. |
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Anyway, it's easy to find beauty in just about any city when you look for it.
Detroit ![]() ![]() |
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