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re: Seattle surpasses Austin as fastest growing big city
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:30 pm to Cooter Davenport
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:30 pm to Cooter Davenport
I've never been but I'll take your word for it.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:31 pm to northshorebamaman
There's a Bama contingent that watches their CFB games at Belltown Pub. If you find yourself in Seattle on Saturdays, they're a fun bunch.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:33 pm to Cooter Davenport
quote:
Well, except that really, San Antonio, in terms of character, could also be described as the “suburb without a city.” So it plays both ways in their case. Haha.
I like San Antonio but it definitely has a suburban feel. Honestly my favorite part of Texas is the area between SA and Austin around New Braunfels. It doesn't have the terrain or weather that I'd prefer but I would absolutely be content living there.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:34 pm to Blastoise
I'll have to check that out.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 4:55 pm to northshorebamaman
The metrics need to be taken together. 100K going to NYC is still more than 90K going to Knoxville unless somehow we devalue humans moving to already large cities.
Percent alone is a misleading statistic.
Percent alone is a misleading statistic.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:06 pm to lynxcat
quote:
Percent alone is a misleading statistic.
As long as you understand the concept of growth rate it shouldn't be misleading at all. That's why I stressed that it was growth rate in the OP. It's a perfectly valid measurement and so is real population growth. They're just used to show us different things.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:08 pm to lynxcat
quote:
The metrics need to be taken together. 100K going to NYC is still more than 90K going to Knoxville unless somehow we devalue humans moving to already large cities.
Why? Once a city is deemed large the percentages mean more than the actual numbers. NYC could absorb 100k and most people wouldn't notice. It would change a lot of things about daily life in Knoxville.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:13 pm to Reservoir dawg
The successful cities will be those growing inside itself. Suburbs are the past. Too many resources needed to expand out. This will hurt Houston etc in the future. Too much upkeep. As always the cheapest warehouse space is UP ! Same with housing people
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:24 pm to Picayuner
I look at this stuff for work. One thing of note with San Antonio is the city limits are MASSIVE, so its one big arse city with not many suburbs.
Houston and Dallas are the opposite. They are landlocked so they are made up of mostly suburbs.
So when these reports come out, San Antonio can go for miles and miles and still be in the city limit. Its like Jacksonville, FL.
Example:
San Antonio city population- 1.5M, metro pop- 2.5M
Dallas city population- 1.3M, metro pop- 7.4M
Houston and Dallas are the opposite. They are landlocked so they are made up of mostly suburbs.
So when these reports come out, San Antonio can go for miles and miles and still be in the city limit. Its like Jacksonville, FL.
Example:
San Antonio city population- 1.5M, metro pop- 2.5M
Dallas city population- 1.3M, metro pop- 7.4M
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:30 pm to dallastiger55
quote:
look at this stuff for work. One thing of note with San Antonio is the city limits are MASSIVE, so its one big arse city with not many suburbs. Houston and Dallas are the opposite. They are landlocked so they are made up of mostly suburbs. So when these reports come out, San Antonio can go for miles and miles and still be in the city limit. Its like Jacksonville, FL. Example: San Antonio city population- 1.5M, metro pop- 2.5M Dallas city population- 1.3M, metro pop- 7.4M
Houston is the 3rd largest urban city by area in the country behind Jacksonville and OKC
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:37 pm to Bruco
I know, im just saying they are landlocked. However big the actual "city limits" are, they cant go further out. With San Antonio, you can.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 5:38 pm to Picayuner
quote:
The successful cities will be those growing inside itself. Suburbs are the past
Eh, if remote work keeps moving the way it is, and autonomous vehicles deliver, all bets are off.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 6:15 pm to Teddy Ruxpin
quote:
Eh, if remote work keeps moving the way it is, and autonomous vehicles deliver, all bets are off
I'd happily live in rural Wyoming and work for a Silicon Valley company.
This post was edited on 5/25/18 at 6:16 pm
Posted on 5/25/18 at 6:18 pm to Blastoise
quote:thanks for the warning
Bama contingent that watches their CFB games at Belltown Pub
Posted on 5/25/18 at 7:58 pm to cattus
quote:
thanks for the warning
LSU gets together at Ballard Lofts, sometimes we share Belltown Pub with Bama. Check out "Seattle Tigers" on Facbook, there's a pretty good group of LSU fans up here. 40 or so deep.
Posted on 5/25/18 at 8:01 pm to Blastoise
quote:
sometimes we share Belltown Pub with Bama
This sounds like a fun time.
And, no, I'm not being sarcastic.
Only problem is paying uber all the way from Tacoma.
This post was edited on 5/25/18 at 8:05 pm
Posted on 5/25/18 at 11:26 pm to northshorebamaman
quote:
This sounds like a fun time.
And, no, I'm not being sarcastic.
It's actually surprisingly cordial - mainly because the most abrasive fans on both sides are often the stupidest, whereas most LSU and Bama fans in Seattle have advanced degrees and aren't morons. It's refreshing.
Posted on 5/26/18 at 12:43 am to Blastoise
quote:
It's actually surprisingly cordial - mainly because the most abrasive fans on both sides are often the stupidest, whereas most LSU and Bama fans in Seattle have advanced degrees and aren't morons. It's refreshing.
I've haven't had one unpleasant interaction with any SEC fans here. We're normally just happy to run across each other.
Posted on 5/26/18 at 5:41 am to Teddy Ruxpin
quote:
Eh, if remote work keeps moving the way it is, and autonomous vehicles deliver, all bets are off.
I don’t think that fuels suburban growth though. Suburbs are the worst of both worlds. I think the trends of remote work freedom, autonomous drone delivery, and better and better satellite internet service will fuel RURAL growth. So instead of moving to the half and half life of suburbs, the people who can will just say frick it, bail on the cities completely, and move to the country - lake houses, beach houses, and the mountains.
Posted on 5/26/18 at 5:51 am to dallastiger55
quote:
San Antonio is the city limits are MASSIVE, so its one big arse city with not many suburbs.
Que?
Suburb doesn’t ONLY mean “outside the city limits”.
If you commute a long distance, have deed restrictions, pay dues, have an HOA, live in a community that was all built at one time by the same developer that sits behind a fence with the neighborhood name on it and you have a neighborhood swimming pool that is supported by your dues, that’s a suburb, whether it has been annexed or not.
For instance, Kingwood in Houston was annexed into the city limits but that’s definitely a suburb.
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