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well the us has a lot more people, I don't get your point.
what's stopping US suburbs from building skyscrapers as most Canadian suburbs around large cities are doing.
I would guess desire? Need? We already have quite a few cities with very developed skylines. The only one I'm impressed with is Toronto, but we have this little town called NYC, which is basically packed to the gills with skyscrapers. You're not fitting 550 more skyscrapers there. But economically, Toronto is the capital of Canada. We have NYC, which as I stated is already built out.
Calgary has really matured and solidified itself as English Canada's number 2 destination city after Toronto, sorry Vancouver.
Not even close to being true. Vancouver is still much more of destination city than Calgary. It offers far more for tourists and is much more urban and walkable than Calgary.
We aren't a several hundred year old Colonial seaport that was already a large, dense city prior to the advent of automobiles. Apples and oranges.
I love Boston, but I would much rather live here. It's dense enough for me in my condo neighborhood in an older, inner-ring suburb.
I think you can "feel the change" in Atlanta more than Boston, at least to me. Boston has pockets- Seaport most notably- that has grown more than any single neighborhood that comes to mind in ATL. There has probably been more construction in Boston too. But, think about the neighborhood shifts in ATL over the last decade.. Little Five Points, Old Fourth, Cabbagetown, Inman. Then add the Beltline, and what it's done for connectivity.
Just feels like ATL has evolved more. Boston is what it was, and will continue to be what it is. And, I'm not complaining at all.. I love the city. Just don't think it's even possible to inflict that level of change in Boston, as compared to the type of change ATL has seen in recent years. With the exception of Seaport, Boston has kind of bettered what it already had, while Atlanta has truly transformed.
Anyways, Seattle comes to mind. Austin has changed, as has Denver, but not quite like Seattle.
Not even close to being true. Vancouver is still much more of destination city than Calgary. It offers far more for tourists and is much more urban and walkable than Calgary.
I am talking about for Canadian not tourists. Calgary is the more important city for Canada than Vancouver and draws more people from across English Canada to it, hence why it's number 2
Last edited by Trojan1982; 10-07-2019 at 06:35 PM..
I think you can "feel the change" in Atlanta more than Boston, at least to me. Boston has pockets- Seaport most notably- that has grown more than any single neighborhood that comes to mind in ATL. There has probably been more construction in Boston too. But, think about the neighborhood shifts in ATL over the last decade.. Little Five Points, Old Fourth, Cabbagetown, Inman. Then add the Beltline, and what it's done for connectivity.
Just feels like ATL has evolved more. Boston is what it was, and will continue to be what it is. And, I'm not complaining at all.. I love the city. Just don't think it's even possible to inflict that level of change in Boston, as compared to the type of change ATL has seen in recent years. With the exception of Seaport, Boston has kind of bettered what it already had, while Atlanta has truly transformed.
Anyways, Seattle comes to mind. Austin has changed, as has Denver, but not quite like Seattle.
I just saw the Seaport last year for the first time in years, I didn't know where I was! The new highrise, glassy parts of MIT blew me away as well.
1} Toronto for very obvious reasons.
2} Seattle
3} Montreal
4} Detroit
Both Calgary and Vancouver have slowed down. Their heyday was in the 2000-2010 period when Calgary was booming at an incredible rate and Vancouver was building en masse. Now with the oil price collapse Calgary has a massive glut of downtown office space and Vancouver's money laundering from China which fueled much of the boom has slowed greatly.
Montreal has hit it's stride again and hasn't seen economic or population growth rates at this level in over a generation. It's high tech sector is booming and one of the world's preeminent centres for AI. It also offers something Toronto and especially Vancouver don't...…………….affordable housing making it a magnet for young people.
Detroit started from a rock bottom standing but since it's bankruptcy it has done a complete 180. Detroit, although still having many problems, is in a very unique position in the Western world...……...it's basically starting from scratch. It is in a position to totally change economical & socially from a 20th century rust belt to a 21st century urban experiment.
Nashville has to be included in this. It's transformed itself in the last several years to an upper tier city.
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