Best place to live in the USA

Quote from spect8or:

I'd consider anywhere, but right now the options I'm looking most closely at are: Toronto, Vancouver, Miami, Tampa, Boston, Houston, Phoenix, Minneapolis and Denver. So, if you are from one of those places, go ahead and sell me on it. What are the best things about it? How does it compare to elsewhere that you've lived? And on the flip side, what are the less desirable aspects?

Hey spect8or...I live in Toronto, can you come her?? please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeease!!!

Ok, OK, I'll try to sell you on it.

We have lots of bums so you will fit right in!

The best thing about it is that I live in it! eh? What do you think of that being a good reason?

The best way to compare it to other cities is that other cities do not have me...while toronto does!! What do you say about that Pondi??

And there are no less desirable aspects to this town though I am sure it will after your arrival!

Hahahaaaaaaaa what a joke you are!
 
Quote from Andy62279:

Wow, sounds great. No income tax is a great incentive too. What are the cons of Houston though? Is it pretty diverse there?

Andy

Andy,

I too love Houston and now live there.

Great restaurants too!

Cons:

lack of parks for a city its size
TRAFFIC
Getting crowded in spots

and drum roll_ It only has 2 seasons: Summer and July and August.

I am building a house in the Hill Country (Kerrville) less crowded and better climate, it's at 2000 feet.

Funny-I did the selection process on findyourspot and sure enuff, Kerrville was there as well as a few other spots I like.
 
I'm living in the Fort Collins/Loveland, CO area right now. Before this,
Boston, MA
Houston, TX
Irvine, CA
Albuquerque, NM
Santa Fe, NM
Phoenix/Scottsdale/Chandler, AZ

They all had some great aspects. I was single in Houston, Santa Fe, and Irvine. Houston has some of the most beautiful and friendly women I've ever met. Santa Fe was a single person's nightmare, if you are used to cities...

Right now, my wife and I live just outside of a small city (Fort Collins) where it's possible to have 20 acres of land, be close to the university (CSU) with all of its variety, be 1 hour from Denver with museums, pro sports, theatres, etc., and enjoy views and dry weather year round. Everyone here seems to have two dogs, three bikes, three pairs of skis, two backpacks, two tents, a Subaru, SUV, or 4 wheel drive. The PhDs per capita as well as average educational level is quite high. Real estate prices fall somewhere between Irvine/Santa Fe and Houston/Phoenix, not bad, but not great. That's probably the only downside.

Colorado is pretty central to most places in the country, and here on the Front Range of the Rockies, we don't have hurricanes, tornados, earthquakes, or floods. Just occaisional snowstorms, but in this dry air, the temperature climbs to 45 or 55 degrees most days during the winter months.

DIA, the airport, is just under 1 hour away. That's not great, but an easy drive. Not as convenient as Phoenix, or as inexpensive. No matter where I've lived, it's always been important for me to be able to get away. I'd put air travel as an important consideration for any 'top' area.

Fort Collins has been easy to get used to....
 
Quote from spect8or:

Myself, I'm a 27 year old single guy,

Miami is the place for you....we are loooking for a few good men to even out the overabundance of bikini clad punani...and I aint talking about the one piece bikinis they wear up north. We have it all...Sun ( very humid at times ) , Beaches, Nightlife, South Beach, Cuisine, fishing, the Shaq Fu, UM and did i mention pound for pound the best punani in the world...
 
Quote from ElCubano:

Miami is the place for you....we are loooking for a few good men to even out the overabundance of bikini clad punani...and I aint talking about the one piece bikinis they wear up north. We have it all...Sun ( very humid at times ) , Beaches, Nightlife, South Beach, Cuisine, fishing, the Shaq Fu, UM and did i mention pound for pound the best punani in the world...

Seems as if the locals like to ask visitors what other parts of the country are like. The natives want out.
 
Quote from spect8or:

I want to live in a big city with at least 1MM people

1M doesn't qualify as "big city" anymore.

Toronto

Safe. Dull. Consider Montreal instead.

Vancouver

Gorgeous. And that's not even taking the burgeoning "Eurasian scenery" situation. :) Lots of rain and grey skies, though. Inexpensive by "world class city" standards, and large parts of the city proper very conducive to a non-car lifestyle.

Miami

Spent a couple of years there, after about 9 months it started feeling confined. Love the Keys, will happily visit again, but just not enough "meat" there for my lifestyle.

Tampa

Awful. Stay away.

Boston

Greatest city in the USA if you like urban living. Unbelievable collection of brains in the area. Not many places you can strike up a conversation with Minsky or Gould or etc while grabbing a Baja Betty burritto. Not a cheap place to live, though, and you will either absolutely hate or totally get off on the driving habits.

Houston

No real city, one giant, depressing sprawl of a mess. Fattest people on the planet. No contest, ugliest "urban" area on the continent. And I should know - I spent 2 years in Cleveland.

Phoenix

Not familiar with.

Minneapolis

Quite a happening little 'burg. Cold. Given its relative isolation, the level of cultural vibrancy is impressive.

Denver

No experience here outside a couple of terrible airport experiences.
 
For a single guy, my list will be like this
1) New York City
2) Washington DC
3) Chicago
4) Vancouver
5) Phoenix
6) Minneapolis
7) Miami

Quote from spect8or:

I am interested in moving to North America again for a while, maybe a year or so. I'm just not sure where. I lived in Detroit for a while as a kid, and in Vegas a few years ago. That makes them both appealing (because I know people/family there) and not so appealing ('cos I've already been there).

I want to live in a big city with at least 1MM people, but preferably more. Climate doesn't particularly bother me, as I like them all (even the extremes). Nightlife is important, but it doesn't have to be "crazy"; as long as there's somewhere half-interesting to go (and there's actually more than five other people there) on say, a Wednesday night, it should be fine.

I'd consider anywhere, but right now the options I'm looking most closely at are: Toronto, Vancouver, Miami, Tampa, Boston, Houston, Phoenix, Minneapolis and Denver. So, if you are from one of those places, go ahead and sell me on it. What are the best things about it? How does it compare to elsewhere that you've lived? And on the flip side, what are the less desirable aspects?

And if you don't live (or haven't lived) in one of the above cities, but feel your city has something special to offer (perhaps you think it's too often overlooked, or an unfair rap), feel free to join in.

Places in particular which, for one reason or another, I probably won't consider, for varying reasons, (but I'm open to being convinced otherwise) are: Atlanta, Hartford, LA, DC, NY, Chicago.

Myself, I'm a 27 year old single guy, former trader (good times, but the music stopped!) from Melbourne, Australia. I've been around a bit, in the US and in Europe, and I have to say, Melbourne's a fantastic place (every bit as good as Sydney, and better, imo).
 
Quote from dougcs:

IF I went down under, I'd live in Sydney; best city I have been to IMO.

DS

Sydney would probably be on my top list. People are friendly, lots of things to do. I've only been there during summer, and I'm not too sure about the other seasons. For the size of the city, I was really impressed with how clean it was.

I forgot what it's called, it's the harbor there. They have laser light shows there every night. Well there's tons of restaurants and clubs there. What a great city
 
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