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re: The DFW metroplex is fascinating to me
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:11 am to dallastiger55
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:11 am to dallastiger55
Fort Worth > Dallas
Dallas is way too many people crammed into a city. I don't have the desire to be around a lot of people so that'll influence my opinion. I'm out in Weatherford a little off the beaten path. Got my little slice of heaven and we're all full out here.
Dallas is way too many people crammed into a city. I don't have the desire to be around a lot of people so that'll influence my opinion. I'm out in Weatherford a little off the beaten path. Got my little slice of heaven and we're all full out here.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:11 am to jlovel7
I would love to live there but that summer heat is a no for me. That's brutal.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:13 am to dallastiger55
quote:
Every major suburban city is the same now
Maybe in the south, but Boston, NYC, Chicago, San Francisco and several others are very unique and different from one another.
This post was edited on 5/13/24 at 9:50 am
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:16 am to Limitlesstigers
quote:
Former resident of Allen here, would go back in a heartbeat if my parents didn't help
Thats where we are. Love it and we aren't moving. Its already built out, everything we need is 15 minutes away, no traffic, great schools and phenomenal parks and rec centers. It has a great small-town feel. Every house I've seen go up for sale is gone in a week for over asking price so it's very stable.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:16 am to Dragula
(no message)
This post was edited on 5/5/25 at 8:27 am
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:17 am to Limitlesstigers
quote:I've been on here for 12 years and have never seen that
There's boomers on here that will blame the state's decline on Xers and Millenials moving to Texas.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:19 am to GreatLakesTiger24
(no message)
This post was edited on 5/5/25 at 8:23 am
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:22 am to jlovel7
My aunt and uncle moved to Plano in the late 70s. I used to love visiting them and going to Rangers games, water parks, etc. They now live in a super rich neighborhood in Frisco, but it’s pretty chill in there. My uncle did very well in his line of work, and now has a nice lake and small little golf course all to himself in his back yard. Still a bit crowded for me, but it’s a sweet set up. To each his own.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:23 am to dallastiger55
I also love when people lump DFW as one city or even Dallas. It's been the fastest growing metro for years now and is now over 8 million and just became the 4th largest media market. By 2030 it will overtake Chicago as the 3rd. There are cranes everywhere in the metroplex and Colin County now has its own skyline.
There are over 50+ suburbs. The actual city limit of Dallas is very small, that's why it's not that high on population vs San Antonio, Houston, San Diego and PHX.
95% of the growth is outside the city and people still lump 8+ million people in with the actual city of Dallas. They account for 1.3m of that 8m
There are over 50+ suburbs. The actual city limit of Dallas is very small, that's why it's not that high on population vs San Antonio, Houston, San Diego and PHX.
95% of the growth is outside the city and people still lump 8+ million people in with the actual city of Dallas. They account for 1.3m of that 8m
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:23 am to LemmyLives
quote:
I had the impression you'd been in TX for a while based on username, at least.
Yeah, I have been in the Hou area for 35 years.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:24 am to dallastiger55
quote:
I also love when people lump DFW as one city or even Dallas. It's been the fastest growing metro for years now and is now over 8 million and just became the 4th largest media market. By 2030 it will overtake Chicago as the 3rd. There are cranes everywhere in the metroplex and Colin County now has its own skyline.
There are over 50+ suburbs. The actual city limit of Dallas is very small, that's why it's not that high on population vs San Antonio, Houston, San Diego and PHX.
95% of the growth is outside the city and people still lump 8+ million people in with the actual city of Dallas. They account for 1.3m of that 8m
thank you Mr. SMSA
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:43 am to dallastiger55
quote:
also love when people lump DFW as one city or even Dallas. It's been the fastest growing metro for years now and is now over 8 million and just became the 4th largest media market. By 2030 it will overtake Chicago as the 3rd. There are cranes everywhere in the metroplex and Colin County now has its own skyline.
It's all Dallas. Without Dallas those suburbs wouldn't exist.
Just like Marietta is Atlanta.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:44 am to yaboidarrell
DFW is in the geological area that is called black dirt grasslands/prairie or something to that effect. It was never clear cut of trees - the sparse trees were mostly cedars, with assorted scrubby other trees. Can’t blame the subdivisions for clearing out non-existent greenery. That tree land is found in east Texas.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:44 am to jlovel7
I remember when the area between the two cities was nothing but scrub mesquite trees.
And an airport, ballpark and six flags, which are the only places I used to go there.
And an airport, ballpark and six flags, which are the only places I used to go there.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:48 am to solus
quote:
It's all Dallas. Without Dallas those suburbs wouldn't exist. Just like Marietta is Atlanta.
I know and I agree. I’m saying more about people judging the whole area when they just visit the actual inner city.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 9:49 am to Basura Blanco
quote:
Yeah, I have been in the Hou area for 35 years.
About how long its been since I've been there.
When I first went to Houston in the 70s, almost everything was inside the inner loop.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 10:05 am to BeachDude022
quote:As long as you plan on advance. Failure to plan on DFW activities usually means disappointment.
There’s endless things to do all days of the week.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 10:13 am to jlovel7
Lived for 20 years in DFW for work, mostly in one of the top suburbs between the two, and could not be happier to be back in Louisiana. The whole area is best described as fake.
Great schools? Sure - on paper. What they are 'learning' in class will have a nice label on it and be completely full of shite (ex. top school district's grade school level gifted program "robotics" class used only cardboard boxes and make believe, I shite you not). Science was WAY behind. Math was on par once in middle school, seriously behind in grade school. Reading/spelling was something you completely taught your kids at home because there was no learning at school. Social Studies was neutered to nothing but Texas, from pre-K to 8th grade.
Neighborhoods were either DR Horton trash or typical McMansions where an "over sized lot" meant you had grass that might take a push mower to cut vs just using a weed eater. Custom homes? Better have the money to build a castle (there were two near us, just fyi...). Conveniences certainly abound if you like knowing that every chain store in existence can be found just a few miles in every direction.... over and over and over and over ad nauseum. Things to do? Sure... zoo, aquarium, jump park, Main Event, movies or shopping... over & over & over again. A couple moved into the area and asked "what's a local-only restaurant that we should try?" Answer: there are hardly any that exist, much less any good. It is almost all chains: Chillis, Hard 8, Papa Deaux's, etc. When it comes to food, there is no soul.
Politics? They give Louisiana a run for the money. Mayor was bought & paid for, facing recall twice. City Council members were caught on the take as well, pushing kickbacks / tax breaks for local money guys at a loss to the residents (sound familiar?) Every decision was about "increasing tax revenue", which meant breaking the established zoning ordinaces to put up high density housing or apartments, turning what was mostly a farm area in the early 2000s into a copy of the very shitty Addison area. Park system was nice to walk around (and neccessary since yards basically didn't exist) but shite for sports; real fields were "game only" (unless you pay the local bureaucrat per use and yes, your tax money built and maintains the fields) and park fields were all holes & rocks. But hey! The parks had stupid arse "modern sculpture art" in them.... Utilities were high (and we were on a co-op for electricity - gas, city, water were over priced). Real estate tax erases the thought of living there post retirment and tax valuations were maxed every damned year. The county was also a large target of voter fraud, so it has that going for it too I guess.
The one highlight I found was in our town / area (since the towns bleed into one another) was that overall, crime was low. That said, if you were wealthy enough, you could literally kill people and get off for being spoiled / "affluenza" and the hoods weren't really all that far away. High priced drugs were of course an issue.
All in all, my wife missed the conveniences when we want them but her, the kids, and I are all much happier back in Louisiana. Yeah, this state has its share of problems too but they are pretty front and center compared to the facade of bullshite in DFW.
Great schools? Sure - on paper. What they are 'learning' in class will have a nice label on it and be completely full of shite (ex. top school district's grade school level gifted program "robotics" class used only cardboard boxes and make believe, I shite you not). Science was WAY behind. Math was on par once in middle school, seriously behind in grade school. Reading/spelling was something you completely taught your kids at home because there was no learning at school. Social Studies was neutered to nothing but Texas, from pre-K to 8th grade.
Neighborhoods were either DR Horton trash or typical McMansions where an "over sized lot" meant you had grass that might take a push mower to cut vs just using a weed eater. Custom homes? Better have the money to build a castle (there were two near us, just fyi...). Conveniences certainly abound if you like knowing that every chain store in existence can be found just a few miles in every direction.... over and over and over and over ad nauseum. Things to do? Sure... zoo, aquarium, jump park, Main Event, movies or shopping... over & over & over again. A couple moved into the area and asked "what's a local-only restaurant that we should try?" Answer: there are hardly any that exist, much less any good. It is almost all chains: Chillis, Hard 8, Papa Deaux's, etc. When it comes to food, there is no soul.
Politics? They give Louisiana a run for the money. Mayor was bought & paid for, facing recall twice. City Council members were caught on the take as well, pushing kickbacks / tax breaks for local money guys at a loss to the residents (sound familiar?) Every decision was about "increasing tax revenue", which meant breaking the established zoning ordinaces to put up high density housing or apartments, turning what was mostly a farm area in the early 2000s into a copy of the very shitty Addison area. Park system was nice to walk around (and neccessary since yards basically didn't exist) but shite for sports; real fields were "game only" (unless you pay the local bureaucrat per use and yes, your tax money built and maintains the fields) and park fields were all holes & rocks. But hey! The parks had stupid arse "modern sculpture art" in them.... Utilities were high (and we were on a co-op for electricity - gas, city, water were over priced). Real estate tax erases the thought of living there post retirment and tax valuations were maxed every damned year. The county was also a large target of voter fraud, so it has that going for it too I guess.
The one highlight I found was in our town / area (since the towns bleed into one another) was that overall, crime was low. That said, if you were wealthy enough, you could literally kill people and get off for being spoiled / "affluenza" and the hoods weren't really all that far away. High priced drugs were of course an issue.
All in all, my wife missed the conveniences when we want them but her, the kids, and I are all much happier back in Louisiana. Yeah, this state has its share of problems too but they are pretty front and center compared to the facade of bullshite in DFW.
Posted on 5/13/24 at 10:27 am to dallastiger55
(no message)
This post was edited on 5/5/25 at 8:22 am
Posted on 5/13/24 at 10:29 am to Limitlesstigers
Detroit surprisingly has some pretty awesome suburbs
established, well maintained, lots of character, and legit wealthy
established, well maintained, lots of character, and legit wealthy
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