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Location: Watching half my country turn into Gilead
3,530 posts, read 4,192,639 times
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Why did the mods delete this in the first place?
I can't speak on in-depth experience for either Richmond or Raleigh outside of passing through on the interstate, but I'd assume Richmond is probably more similar. Isn't Raleigh more of a Sunbelt-style city? Not to say that "Wilmington" (really most of New Castle County, if we're being honest) doesn't sprawl, because it does, but I'd guess that Richmond has older, more historically dense neighborhoods than Raleigh.
Oh, and let's not bring the whole "Southerness" issue into the comparison, as Wilmington isn't Southern in the least.
Because the first thread lacked criteria upon which to make the comparisons.
Quote:
I can't speak on in-depth experience for either Richmond or Raleigh outside of passing through on the interstate, but I'd assume Richmond is probably more similar. Isn't Raleigh more of a Sunbelt-style city? Not to say that "Wilmington" (really most of New Castle County, if we're being honest) doesn't sprawl, because it does, but I'd guess that Richmond has older, more historically dense neighborhoods than Raleigh.
Oh, and let's not bring the whole "Southerness" issue into the comparison, as Wilmington isn't Southern in the least.
The question is, is Richmond more similar to Wilmington or Raleigh, not is Wilmington more similar to Richmond or Raleigh.
Location: Watching half my country turn into Gilead
3,530 posts, read 4,192,639 times
Reputation: 2925
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mutiny77
Because the first thread lacked criteria upon which to make the comparisons.
The question is, is Richmond more similar to Wilmington or Raleigh, not is Wilmington more similar to Richmond or Raleigh.
Got ya.
And I wasn't trying to spin the question, at all. Richmond is the focus of this thread, not Wilmington. However, comparing a city to two additional cities and asking which is most similar to it will inevitably lead to some crossflow between all three, in all directions--that's just the nature of the beast.
Oh, I wasn't trying to spin the question, at all. Richmond is the focus of this thread, not Wilmington. However, comparing a city to two additional cities and asking which is most similar to it will inevitably lead to some crossflow between all three, in all directions--that's just the nature of the beast.
It's southern, but it's really country. It's pretty urban actually.
Right!
Someone who mislabels Rich as "country" isn't hardly familiar with the city. As it is smaller, surely it doesn't have the urbanity of Baltimore or othere large cities. But compared across most of the South, Richmond is very urban, especially in the core city (basically everywhere in the city limits besides the Far West End and the Southside), closer in scale to a norther city than the typical southern city....
As to the topic, I'll say inner city Richmond has nothing in common with inner city Raleigh. The suburbs are comparable, but not the cities in general. Also, Richmond and Raleigh do share a general Southern commonality in food, demographics, etc. So it's probably closer to Raleigh, but the street layouts, architecture, urbanity, and inner city densities more closely mirror Wilmington...
It is important to also note the historical nature of Richmond far outweighs Raleigh, and that also makes it more similar to Wilmington...
Not too familiar with Wilmington, but my homegirl is from there and I spent some time in July '14 there, her dad and siblings live in a neighborhood up the street from the Howard Young Correctional Center. It was both larger and prettier than I thought it would be. I had fun; don't know what the metro would be were it split from Philly, but I would guess somewhere between 700-900,000? It definitely is a 'city', but it's noticeably smaller than Richmond or Raleigh. I would say the closest it "feels" in size is comparable to Columbia or Syracuse----not comparing demographically, but both of which feel about Wilmington-sized, and both of which are also much smaller than Rich or Raleigh....
Location: The place where the road & the sky collide
23,814 posts, read 34,759,574 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by qworldorder
Why did the mods delete this in the first place?
I can't speak on in-depth experience for either Richmond or Raleigh outside of passing through on the interstate, but I'd assume Richmond is probably more similar. Isn't Raleigh more of a Sunbelt-style city? Not to say that "Wilmington" (really most of New Castle County, if we're being honest) doesn't sprawl, because it does, but I'd guess that Richmond has older, more historically dense neighborhoods than Raleigh.
Oh, and let's not bring the whole "Southerness" issue into the comparison, as Wilmington isn't Southern in the least.
Just by being MidAtlantic Wilmington, & Philadelphia for that matter, does share southern qualities & northern qualities. That's what being MidAtlantic is all about. It isn't a primary part of city comparisons.
Wilmington & Richmond have historical industrial backgrounds. Both have grit. All three cities share similar color palettes. Wilmington & Richmond are on 95 & have viable ports. All 3 have Amtrak stops. That's the way to compare them.
Richmond is on the James and Wilmington is on the Christina River. Both are older cities so that really automatically puts RVA and Wilmington closer in this comparison than Raleigh. From my vantage point, the way the cities are built really do play a very large part in it for me.
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