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Are Columbus and Indianapolis Midwest Sunbelt hybrids? (neighborhoods . . . When I think of the term "Sunbelt" I think of places with warm winters, warmer then found in Columbus and Indianapolis Maybe the difference you see is that both cities are still growing because both are capital cities and are not rustbelt In order words, there maybe some similarities but that does not make them Sunbelt
Monterey Sunbelt (Highland, Seaside, Marina: for sale, home, buyers . . . Of course the further inland you head the less fog more sun you will find They pretty much planned the airport's runway in the sunbelt But even along the coast there is a big difference For example I work near Marina and drive home toward Monterey's sunbelt along Hwy 1 Many times I leave work in the fog and arrive home in the sun
Downtown Detroit vs Downtown Houston - City vs. City - City-Data. com I haven't been to Detroit in decades but I have been to Houston several times since then One time back in 2010 I stayed right by Minute Maid Park downtown and it was so empty on the downtown streets But that's just the way most of those Sunbelt cities are in their downtowns so I didn't think much of it
Population changes in the ATL - Atlanta - Georgia (GA) - City-Data. com Yes, Atlanta has a smaller total foreign-born population than Houston or Dallas, but that’s not the point The real issue is how much of Atlanta’s recent growth is driven by immigration, and from 2020 to 2024, immigration accounted for a larger share of Atlanta’s growth than domestic migration did (just 6 4
Cities stuck in the 90s VeRsUs cities that act like their in the 21st . . . Its one of the least transit-friendly cities of its size, even as similarly-sized sunbelt cities like Charlotte and Austin have pressed forward with more intensive development Its core has expanded the least of the four major Florida cities since then (St Petersburg does feel more modern IMO, except for that MLB park)
Cities that are opposite of each other (best, compared, America) - City . . . Hoboken, NJ - tiny city limits (1 2 sq miles), extremely dense and tightly packed, very walkable and vibrant, with an old world feeling vs Jacksonville having a humongous land area (875 sq miles), very new and auto orientated, about as sprawly as a sunbelt city can get and not a lot of activity in its downtown Seattle, WA
What is the most YIMBY city metro in the US? (major, projects) - Urban . . . Also, I think people look at San Francisco is ask “why don’t they Just build higher over the existing townhomes” Thats something the sunbelts also can’t do Imagine just throwing up buildings in single family homes in those wealthy neighborhoods ringing sunbelt cities… And it’s not just sunbelt DC
Dallas v. Houston v. Atlanta - Which will be more urban by 2030 (redux . . . MARTA running through the Peachtree corridor just presents itself as more urban on that front over DART or Metrorail Otherwise all three have a fairly similar Sunbelt urban planning model with multi nodal districts and ginormous freeways Aesthetically I like that Atlanta's urban blocks drop off quickly into scenic leafy neighborhoods