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Definitely the Mill District in Minneapolis. Most of that neighborhood was built out in in the 2000s, and the architecture (at least the new, non-historic buildings) screams Aughts.
Chicago, IL - Millennium Park gives me "optimistic 2000s" vibes, specially the auditorium. Dated enough, it needs maintenance.
Allston, MA - Gives me 2003's punk vibes. "Edgy" New Englanders with dark-haired mohawks, leather pants, dark make up rejoicing in decrepit shop fronts, mediocre food and dated infrastructure while some unalluring, jaw-dislocated Irish-American dude rides past on his bike wearing a cheap sleeveless shirt, polyester backpack, and $3 CVS wired headphones gives everyone a hard time. No wonder Machine Gun Kelly is a hero here in Academic Appalachia.
Have to disagree. Downtown Indy is very "2010s" as in cookie cutter box apartments. The whole downtown was essentially rebuilt just in time for the 2012 Super Bowl anyway.
Then there is Bloomington, where I used to live. From 2015 to 2020-ish the only thing around was construction cranes building cookie-cutter 5+1 apartments all over town.
Now, culturally...it is not even 2000s but 1980s in most of the state.
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