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re: The Northeast is exactly how we think it is…

Posted on 7/10/23 at 11:37 pm to
Posted by Cypdog
Member since Jan 2014
832 posts
Posted on 7/10/23 at 11:37 pm to
It’s not “WIDELY” held. Even in the state of NY. Everyone outside the city resents it. You must be young, that’s the only group in my experience with any idea of going to NY. That or actors. I get lots of college kids that want to go to NY because of high finance, but when it comes to places to live, cities like Austin, SF, Seattle, Chicago and others are all on the list. Young kids want to see stuff. No one settles in NY unless you are childless, unmarried, or ultra wealthy.
Posted by NIH
Member since Aug 2008
112711 posts
Posted on 7/11/23 at 6:37 am to
Your daddy sounds like a yokel
Posted by VooDude
Member since Aug 2017
1092 posts
Posted on 7/11/23 at 8:08 am to
quote:

I was born in Mountainside NJ, with parents from NY. They transferred to LA and never looked back. I think the greatest city on earth claim is living on the past. It’s a city worth getting a taste of then moving on. There are plenty of cities like NY used to be now. Maybe not Birmingham or present day NO, but lots. In part because people copied it, in part because other cities became more populous and grew culturally. NY is really nothing more than an expensive place that is densely populated. And for the record, no one has called NY the greatest city on earth since Crocodile Dundee. It has largely been erased from people’s consciousness unless they watch 90s sitcoms.
Agreed, since moving to Nashville last year my quality of life has shot up exponentially.
Posted by EastBankTiger
A little west of Hoover Dam
Member since Dec 2003
21336 posts
Posted on 7/11/23 at 8:31 am to
Um...get back to me when you see those flags associated with atrocities like this one (in Boston, no less.)

Posted by Inner Nostril Eczema
The Center of the Universe
Member since Jul 2023
176 posts
Posted on 7/11/23 at 1:03 pm to
quote:

It’s not “WIDELY” held.

Worlds Best cities.com disagrees

https://www.worldsbestcities.com/rankings/americas-best-cities/
quote:

America’s Top 10 Best Cities for 2023:
1 New York, NY
2 Chicago, IL
3 Los Angeles, CA
4 San Francisco, CA
5 Washington, D.C.
6 Miami, FL
7 Boston, MA
8 Seattle, WA
9 Houston, TX
10 San Jose, CA

Resonance is a consultancy in tourism, real estate and economic development, and its Best Cities rankings quantify and benchmark the relative quality of place, reputation and competitive identity for urban centers.

the list is based on each city's performance in These 6 metrics
Posted by Inner Nostril Eczema
The Center of the Universe
Member since Jul 2023
176 posts
Posted on 7/11/23 at 1:07 pm to
From the resonance report:
quote:

The greatest city in America—lauded and crowned in our rankings for almost a decade and in countless others for many more—was a ghastly reminder during the pandemic of the vulnerability of even the colossal and seemingly all-powerful; we saw here what awaited other cities across the U.S. and globally.

Today, NYC is also the urban recovery writ large.

Sniping haters who declared that the big, vibrant, cheek-by-jowl city experiment was finally over as the urban exodus intensified in 2020 and vacancy in the city’s coveted real estate hit double digits were quickly silenced by the rebound. A mid-pandemic 50% drop in real estate sales spiked to the highest all-time median rents in Manhattan two years later (currently registering in the mid-$5,000s per month).

Tourism, the accelerant for so many of the city’s amenities, was a priority for a sustainable recovery, and city leaders are doing everything in their power to bring back not only those apprehensive New Yorkers whose hunger for regular bites of the Big Apple is finally being sated, but also the nearly 70 million people who visited in 2019 and spent $46 billion across its expansive quilt of Sights & Landmarks (ranked #1 in the country).

Tourism numbers have also had a breathtaking return, from 33 million visitors in 2021 (less than half of 2019’s total) to 56 million last year—and onward to a projected 61 million this year.

First order of business: getting those not already here to town. Fortunately, the suspension of travel for more than a year expedited the long-planned transformations of New York’s international gateways. LaGuardia Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport all have new terminals, with the new Terminal B at LaGuardia alone boasting 35 gates (to say nothing of the FAO Schwarz on site). The new Terminal C also came online last year. Newark Liberty International’s updated Terminal A has opened with 33 new gates and construction has started on a new, congestion-easing 2.5-mile elevated guideway train system. JFK’s Terminal 8 just unveiled 130,000 square feet of new and renovated space, and a new Terminal One opens later this decade.

Back on the ground, Moynihan Train Hall is a new 17-track expansion of Penn Station that, if you squint, could pass for a Northern European transit hub from the future.

With so many expected arrivals, NYC is certainly making sure everyone has a place to stay. Almost 10,000 new or renovated hotel rooms opened in 2022 alone, including the headline-grabbing Aman New York, an “urban sanctuary” on Fifth Avenue. Also open is the year-old Ritz-Carlton New York, NoMad—named for its ’hood—which features Jose Andres’ Nubeluz lounge on the 50th floor and plenty of massive panels from which to watch the street action. Better yet, soak in the 360-degree city panorama on the rooftop patio. The buildout stretches across the city, with a newly opened Thompson in Midtown, and new Renaissance Hotels properties in Harlem and Flushing. Moxy Hotels is also opening multiple locations in the Lower East Side and Williamsburg.

At street level, the city’s firehose turns cultural, with massive museums (also ranking #1 nationally) going all-in on expansions and new openings.

The Louis Armstrong House Museum in Corona, Queens, is undergoing a physical and programmatic expansion for a new cultural center that includes an interactive exhibit, archival collections, a 68-seat jazz club and a store. It should be open by the time you read this. The Bronx Children’s Museum also just reopened after moving to a new home in Mill Pond Park. Dia Chelsea is a new contemporary installation space, and the Frick Madison (the temporary home of the Frick Collection) has opened in the Breuer on Madison Avenue—a building formerly used by the Met. Speaking of the Met, New York’s 153-year-old cultural institution (housing 1.5 million objects and hosting seven million visitors in a non-pandemic year) announced a $500-million reno of its modern and contemporary wing. Not as storied but equally New York is the new Museum of Broadway, the first permanent museum dedicated to the famed heartland of the stage, which opened in Times Square with a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of major theater productions. Also: Broadway shows are back!

Two more very NYC reasons to experience the city now: this year marks the 50th anniversary of the birth of hip hop music, founded in the Bronx on August 11, 1973, when Clive Campbell—better known as DJ Kool Herc—spun records at his sister’s birthday party. Look for dozens of local celebrations, exhibits and workshops this summer and fall. It’s also the 100-year anniversary of the underrated Museum of the City of New York, which celebrates and documents 750,000 objects, including photographs, prints, costumes, paintings and more, to allow NYC-philes to obsess over this place like nowhere else.

For those who prefer their immersion outdoors, classics like the High Line and Central Park are joined by the city’s newest green space, Little Island—2.4 acres floating on the Hudson near the Meatpacking District on the site of an old pier. Like most things here, you have to see it to believe it.

When it’s your turn to return to America’s best city, do yourself a favor and make time to see the phoenix rise from above: there are the classics, like the Empire State Building and the Top of the Rock, but there are also spectacular new perches, like SUMMIT One Vanderbilt and its all-glass exterior elevators, called Ascent. Go up, look down and breathe out. This city is back.
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