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Mar 26, 2019 21:21:45 GMT 10
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Post by mwalker96 on Mar 26, 2019 21:21:45 GMT 10
I heard Boston is pretty dense but I don't think it's as dense as cities in the Mid-Atlantic like Philadelphia, Baltimore, DC but still dense nonetheless. I haven't been to be able to accurately compare, but it seems similar, just smaller. Boston proper isn't that large square mileage wise so it doesn't actually have that big of a population on its own. It remains urban feeling just outside in Cambridge, Dorchester, etc. But it's definitely dense compared to say, the Florida cities. Yea that's true. The cites below the Mason-Dixon line are significantly more spread out due to the those cities developing post-WW2. I know you'll probably laugh if visit the major cites in North Carolina (where I live) and you here people call those places urban. I know Charlotte does give that big city feel but it's still largely suburban. Any city with sidewalks all-around it's city limits I classify as urban.
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Mar 31, 2019 10:21:56 GMT 10
Post by al on Mar 31, 2019 10:21:56 GMT 10
Yea that's true. The cites below the Mason-Dixon line are significantly more spread out due to the those cities developing post-WW2. I know you'll probably laugh if visit the major cites in North Carolina (where I live) and you here people call those places urban. I know Charlotte does give that big city feel but it's still largely suburban. Any city with sidewalks all-around it's city limits I classify as urban. I'm going to Tennessee in June so I'll do an analysis when I get back. But trying to find hotels, I'm definitely noticing how suburban the cities are. The old factories and corresponding houses can definitely give places in the northeast that aren't really that big an urban look.
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Mar 31, 2019 12:46:41 GMT 10
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Post by mwalker96 on Mar 31, 2019 12:46:41 GMT 10
Yea that's true. The cites below the Mason-Dixon line are significantly more spread out due to the those cities developing post-WW2. I know you'll probably laugh if visit the major cites in North Carolina (where I live) and you here people call those places urban. I know Charlotte does give that big city feel but it's still largely suburban. Any city with sidewalks all-around it's city limits I classify as urban. I'm going to Tennessee in June so I'll do an analysis when I get back. But trying to find hotels, I'm definitely noticing how suburban the cities are. The old factories and corresponding houses can definitely give places in the northeast that aren't really that big an urban look. True, I heard Memphis is pretty dense for southern standards since it was established right after the civil war.
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Mar 31, 2019 13:11:10 GMT 10
Post by al on Mar 31, 2019 13:11:10 GMT 10
True, I heard Memphis is pretty dense for southern standards since it was established right after the civil war. I can see that, Memphis seems to have the most "urban" reputation in TN. I'm going to Nashville and Chattanooga though, which seem pretty spread out.
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Mar 31, 2019 23:40:46 GMT 10
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Post by mwalker96 on Mar 31, 2019 23:40:46 GMT 10
True, I heard Memphis is pretty dense for southern standards since it was established right after the civil war. I can see that, Memphis seems to have the most "urban" reputation in TN. I'm going to Nashville and Chattanooga though, which seem pretty spread out. Yeah I heard Nashville is pretty nice. My cousin went there in 2015 and loved it, and she visited Chattanooga in 2016 and loved it as well. I know your probably going to be like "this doesn't look like New Hampshire".
al likes this
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