Back on central campus, legend has it that if you step on this block M, donated by the class of 1953, before you take your first blue book exam, you're destined to fail it. I carefully avoided doing so for 19 years (seriously!).
Penn has the same tradition, except its finals.
I imagine it's fairly common as absurd superstitions go. There's another one about making out under a certain archway = automatic marriage.
One would think. At Penn you're supposed to "kiss" under
before you graduate
They live on the Harland and Wolff shipyard, which is famous for building the Titanic.
The Waterfront:
This is the Waterfront Hall, which sits in front of the Lagan. Somewhere nearby is this guy:
If you look closely, you'll see that the tiles he's made of have pictures in them; mostly history-related stuff.
A nice view of the river Lagan:
You can see those hills in the background from virtually anywhere in Belfast. It's a really small city.
Queen's University, which is officially called Queen's University Belfast, in case you forgot what city you were in:
One of the more iconic tall buildings (using the term "skyscraper" would be an insult to skyscrapers):
Belfast City Hospital. It's really near the university; I believe its med students train here.
I had a good view of this ugly motherfucker when I was in primary school.
The Botanic gardens:
One of Queen's physics buildings is visible in the background. I used to sit in there after school while I waited for my mother to finish her experiments.
The [strike]London Eye[/strike] Belfast Wheel:
I'm not sure if this thing is still up; I have a feeling they took it down recently. I never got a chance to see it. That building beside it is Belfast City Hall, and the grassy area in front of the hall is the offical teen goth hangout.
The Shankill road:
A shithole within a shithole. If you want to immerse yourself in Belfast's troubled past in the most boring yet dangerous way possible, this is the place to go.
Lieberkuhn on
While you eat, let's have a conversation about the nature of consent.
I went to Belfast in 1999, the cabbie drove us through an estate like that on the way to the airport like he was showing it off...I wasn't keen to take a closer look frankly.
I went to Belfast in 1999, the cabbie drove us through an estate like that on the way to the airport like he was showing it off...I wasn't keen to take a closer look frankly.
Yeah a sad number of people in Northern Ireland are actually proud of our violent, ignorant heritage.
Lieberkuhn on
While you eat, let's have a conversation about the nature of consent.
I'm surprised I haven't seen Seattle here yet, considering how many forumers we have scuttling about our fair city.
This is our amazing skyline as seen from Capital Hill:
Here it is again except from the viewpoint of West Seattle, which is technically part of Seattle but across Elliot Bay from the downtown proper. It is also where I grew up, we're almost like our own separate town as the only way to reach the rest of Seattle is a bridge.
You may have heard of this place, this is where the guys who throw the fish sell fish, also it has the best piroshky place in the city, as well as the oldest Starbucks.
Pioneer Square is where you see a lot of the older city, Smith Tower is near there and it used to be the largest building this side of the Mississippi, it's also where you can tour the Underground or get wasted as there's a ton of bars.
Smith Tower, not so impressive nowadays.
And this is where I go to college, the University of Washington, you've probably seen our library unless you've never watched any of the Harry Potter films as they used the reading room in the main library to film parts of the movie.
And the room in question, it does look pretty cool.
I live north of there in the Ravenna neighborhood, this graph sums up what it's like pretty fast.
It's full of young people with families who throw dirty looks towards the college students and the college students like me being given dirty looks for such indiscretions as walking down the street late at night or being awake after 10 pm.
MorgensternICH BIN DER PESTVOGELDU KAMPFAFFE!Registered Userregular
edited May 2010
Where I will be living come fall for two years to complete my second degree.
Lethbridge, AB, Canada. How quaint. How Canadian prairie chic.
The skyline from the university side of town.
The rail bridge that spans the length of the valley, sorry coulee, between the two sides of town. Built in the early 1900s, it was a great place to commit suicide from until they fenced off both sides of the bridge.
There's a casino! Yay!
And a university that has a building that looks like a space cruiser!
Another university picture.
And televisions outside in the winter?
What this thread makes me realize is that I go from living in one shithole to living in another shithole while others here live in the some of the most beautiful, important, cosmopolitan cities in the world.
Morgenstern on
“Every time we walk along a beach some ancient urge disturbs us so that we find ourselves shedding shoes and garments or scavenging among seaweed and whitened timbers like the homesick refugees of a long war.” - Loren Eiseley
I'm surprised nobody commented on the picture of that guy in the boat. I thought it was hilarious.
Anyway, more from Newton Centre:
City hall:
I live right by there. Anyway, you like hills? We've got some. I actually live at the base of the main one, Heartbreak Hill, which I claim the nation of Kenya has declared war on:
Here's the view from an intersection near my house.
This is Crystal Lake, as named by the ice company that claimed the ice was as clear as a crystal. It was first called Wiswall's Pond after Thomas Wiswall, who founded Cambridge and build his holmestead on the pond, then Baptist Pond because of the nearby church that used it for baptisms.
We have a number of historic buildings:
Newton Centre/Center Station, built in 1886 by Henry Hobson Richardson and Frederick Law Olmsted. Notice that the old sign uses a different spelling from the official signs:
The other side of the street is also significant:
Apperantly, my local power station is historical, most likely because it was built in 1904 by some guy named "Boston Edison."
This 1888 church is significant because of its distinctive architectural style and an event I'm too lazy to discover the nature of. Its predecessor was built in the colonial era and had a fairly prominant minister in the 1850's
1875 1850-1875 1866 Andover Newton Theological School 1800 1916 1897 1893 1885 (I can guarantee that there's a smaller house built in the exact same style a couple blocks away, as any house that size would come with a carriage house)
Of course, I'm really close to the border with Newtonville. My high school, which is ten minutes away walking at a leasurely pace, is in Newtonville, as is the the house of my university's president (it comes with the position). Besides the high school, its main landmarks are an architecturally significant church and one of the country's first buildings to require the purchase of airspace (everyone drives under it, so it's a landmark):
It was better when it was a star market.
It's basically a small town dominated by a military base (Naval Shipyard), with a ferry link to Seattle. What you're seeing there is the waterfront, the marina, the downtown buildings, and the dank nasty run-down looking buildings of the shipyard on the lower left (and it extends quite a ways off the photo to the left).
We got boats!
I think those are actually the old busted shit...I used to run along the road you see up top when I lived on the west side, and standing close to one of those ships is actually pretty damn impressive. We've got at least one operating carrier (I think we're getting another).
More waterfront pictures!
Our city's current economic strategy seems to be "build condos on the waterfront, and pray that people are willing to deal with a 60-minute ferry commute to downtown Seattle." It worked. For a while. Not so much anymore since everything went to shit. Still, the waterfront district is nice. Then you run into a neverending sea of payday loan places, pawn shops, fast food, tattoo parlors, unmaintained houses, and general quasi-urban blight most of the way to the freeway (which heads down to Tacoma, via the Narrows, about a half-hour away).
In short, Bremerton is not a very nice place overall...but still, it has its charms. And you're really not that likely to be shot or stabbed.
Aerial view!
The middle is West Bremerton. Off to the right, over the bridges, is East Bremerton, which is marginally nicer. At least people who live there convince themselves of this. I live about a mile down the road (off the picture) from that bridge on the right. I live towards the top of a hill, and if I run to the top of it I can see the top of the Seattle skyline.
Oh, and we've got Olympic College, which from what I can tell is the inspiration for the hit show Community. It looks like a real community college's community college, if you know what I mean.
< 1400 for me
that is considering splitting with 2-3 friends
---
i would post pictures of where i am from but ain't nothing good to post
If you all have $1400 on it you can find a nice 3 bedroom for $4200 easy. What neighborhood are you looking for?
Yeah if you can pay 1400 each, then you have all sorts of options. If you're looking to split 1400 TOTAL, look at Bushwick. I'm splitting a really nice (two floors, backyard, dishwasher, roof access, etc) 1850 with four people, so we're all paying between 400 and 500 a month. It's close to the L and the JMZ.
< 1400 for me
that is considering splitting with 2-3 friends
---
i would post pictures of where i am from but ain't nothing good to post
If you all have $1400 on it you can find a nice 3 bedroom for $4200 easy. What neighborhood are you looking for?
Yeah if you can pay 1400 each, then you have all sorts of options. If you're looking to split 1400 TOTAL, look at Bushwick. I'm splitting a really nice (two floors, backyard, dishwasher, roof access, etc) 1850 with four people, so we're all paying between 400 and 500 a month. It's close to the L and the JMZ.
wat
you can sleep in new york city for 500 bucks a month
I'm surprised I haven't seen Seattle here yet, considering how many forumers we have scuttling about our fair city.
This is our amazing skyline as seen from Capital Hill:
Here it is again except from the viewpoint of West Seattle, which is technically part of Seattle but across Elliot Bay from the downtown proper. It is also where I grew up, we're almost like our own separate town as the only way to reach the rest of Seattle is a bridge.
You may have heard of this place, this is where the guys who throw the fish sell fish, also it has the best piroshky place in the city, as well as the oldest Starbucks.
Pioneer Square is where you see a lot of the older city, Smith Tower is near there and it used to be the largest building this side of the Mississippi, it's also where you can tour the Underground or get wasted as there's a ton of bars.
Smith Tower, not so impressive nowadays.
And this is where I go to college, the University of Washington, you've probably seen our library unless you've never watched any of the Harry Potter films as they used the reading room in the main library to film parts of the movie.
And the room in question, it does look pretty cool.
I live north of there in the Ravenna neighborhood, this graph sums up what it's like pretty fast.
It's full of young people with families who throw dirty looks towards the college students and the college students like me being given dirty looks for such indiscretions as walking down the street late at night or being awake after 10 pm.
Oh, and GO SOUNDERS (I am not in this picture)
don't forget this, which is like 5 minutes from my house
also, when you look up urban sprawl on wikipedia, the picture is of a shopping center in one of the more soul sucking suburbs. go utah.
We're the capital of Ontario and Canada's biggest city and commercial centre.
Our distinctive one-testicled Skyline:
The bright thing on the left is the SkyDome.
The big ass tower is the CN Tower. Formerly the tallest free standing structure on earth till those guys in Dubai built something or other. We're hoping to reclaim the title when that place collapses into an apocalyptic wasteland or something. It also changes colours alot.
Here's another picture:
The thing in the foreground is Toronto Island, across from downtown.
Another neat picture of the downtown:
This is the City Hall. The area in front in Nathan-Phillips Square. It gets turned into an ice rink in the winter:
It's a really nice city. Very green, lots of plants and shit:
Like any large city, it all depends on where you live though.
Many attractions too:
This is the Ontario Science Centre. This place is awesome:
We've also got the 3rd largest zoo in the world. Here's some polar bears:
This is the gate for the CNE (Canadian National Exhibition):
There's a big ass fair type thing there every august.
This is the ROM (Royal Ontario Museum) complete with it's new horrible cancerous growth that makes it look like it's being conquered by a race of viral robot aliens or something:
This is the AGO (Art Gallery of Ontario):
Lots of art in there I hear or something. Maybe not, I don't know.
We also have giant ass malls. This is the Eaton's Centre:
Not technically in the city, but just north of it is Canada's Wonderland which I will mention cause it's awesome. More rollercoasters then any themepark outside of the US. They don't shit around with that non-going-fast stuff there:
There's a bunch of shit I'm sure I haven't included, but I'm tired now.
We also have some nice beaches - Strandhill (apparently very good for surfing)
And rosses point - which is just kinda pretty
since then , i've lived in
Limerick, Ireland
No. not that
This
Limerick has the unfortunate nickname of "stab city" in Ireland, but i decided to go there for university anyway
Still, it's got some cool stuff
Like King Johns Castle which was used in the multiple sieges of limerick
And speaking of university, i went to the University of Limerick
Which has these massive flagpoles, for no real reason
Ohh and keeping the castle theme, the area i lived was called castletroy, after this
and heres bunratty castle, which is just a massive touristy thing, and nowhere near as important as King Johns was, but it's still cool.
Dublin (already covered by Tav)
Dundee, Scotland
The city
Which is home to the beano and dandy comics producers, DC Thomson.
And to prove how proud they are of it, there is a statue of 'Desperate Dan' in the middle of town
I was there for a Masters at the University of Abertay, Dundee
Which is probably best known for the place that Dave Jones went to, before he founded DMA design (they of Lemmings, GTA, etc) and Now Real Time Worlds, who are also located in Dundee.
Cardiff, Wales
Where i just farted about for a bit, but anyway
but it also has a castle!
which is right in the middle of Cardiff city and is pretty interesting.
Ohh and the rest of the town is no slouch either
Also, if you've ever watched New Dr.Who or it's spinoff Torchwood you'll probably recgnise a few places, especially in the case of torchwood
Like this, for example/
It's also got a bit of a reputation for being a rough night out, which is lies, the town is no better or worse than anwyhere else, but putting all the chippies on the same lane (known as chippy lane) was probably a bad idea.
But it's not as bad as it looks, i swear.
and now i'm here - The Isle of Wight, England.
Which is just across from Portsmouth (Hey Rhesus Positive! )
And i live here, Newport (which is not on the coast or has a port of any kind)
in fact the red brick building at the end of the street on the left hand side is where i work.
So far, the only interesting places i've found as the needles
Which is cool because back in the cold war it used to be a secret rocket testing facility for the British ICBM program
There's also godshill, which is a picturesque little town, complete with thatched roofs
And now I'd best get back to work....
HerrCron on
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MorgensternICH BIN DER PESTVOGELDU KAMPFAFFE!Registered Userregular
On behalf of the hick cities: fuck you, Toronto. No one outside of the GTA likes you.
Morgenstern on
“Every time we walk along a beach some ancient urge disturbs us so that we find ourselves shedding shoes and garments or scavenging among seaweed and whitened timbers like the homesick refugees of a long war.” - Loren Eiseley
Not technically in the city, but just north of it is Canada's Wonderland which I will mention cause it's awesome. More rollercoasters then any themepark outside of the US. They don't shit around with that non-going-fast stuff there:
There's a bunch of shit I'm sure I haven't included, but I'm tired now.
When I was a kid my parents used to drive 6 hours during their summer vacations to take us to Canada's Wonderland. I loved that place but haven't been there in over 15 years.
I grew up in Randolph, MA. My mother's family is from there and for them growing up, it looked like this
But when I was growing up it changed to look like
Sadly, there was also a lot of violence at the schools. A teacher was stabbed by a student and my parents made the decision to move to Mansfield, MA. Mansfield looks like this
It's a white bread town full of suburban development. I'm pretty sure I'm friends with the only minority that lived there. Last year, I moved to Brockton, MA. Brockton at one point was famous for two things.
But Rocky died and the shoe factories moved overseas for cheaper labor. Brockton is now famous for something entirely different.
My current town is: Ottawa, Canada's Capital City - the opposite side of the river from Jean.
Here is a view of the Ottawa skyline from the Museum of Civilisation in Gatineau
We have a nifty parliament building with a big tower known as the Peace Tower and nice rotunda library overlooking the Ottawa River
The Supreme Court of Canada is located just up Wellington Ave. from said parliament buildings
We also have some nifty museums
Nature:
War:
As well as a funky gallery that has a budget item for drip buckets - I wonder why...
Ottawa is also known for it's many beautiful green spaces, canal, and giant arachnid
All-in-all, not a bad place to live if you like being in one of the coldest/snowiest National Capitals in the world...
Wow it's so weird and cool to see Charleston on the first page. Such a great place to grow up.
Currently living near Denver, Colorado, which isn't so bad, but it has to be the most average place on Earth.
The skyline's pretty neat I guess.
Nope, that skyline's perfectly average. :P
I've always found Denver to be one of those larger cities where I can't really identify it from the skyline...like, nothing in it stands out to me. Phoenix would probably be another, if I hadn't lived there, though the B of A building stands out enough from the rest that maybe not. But even some smaller cities (like Tampa) have some distinctive enough buildings that they're easily identified. And obviously cities like S.F., L.A., Chicago, and New York are easy. And cities like Seattle, that have (relatively) tall landmarks (Space Needle). A waterfront helps too.
Wow it's so weird and cool to see Charleston on the first page. Such a great place to grow up.
Currently living near Denver, Colorado, which isn't so bad, but it has to be the most average place on Earth.
The skyline's pretty neat I guess.
Nope, that skyline's perfectly average. :P
I've always found Denver to be one of those larger cities where I can't really identify it from the skyline...like, nothing in it stands out to me. Phoenix would probably be another, if I hadn't lived there, though the B of A building stands out enough from the rest that maybe not. But even some smaller cities (like Tampa) have some distinctive enough buildings that they're easily identified. And obviously cities like S.F., L.A., Chicago, and New York are easy. And cities like Seattle, that have (relatively) tall landmarks (Space Needle). A waterfront helps too.
Perhaps I'm thinking way too much about this.
Yep, Denver sucks. I'll be moving there in about a week or so, too. They do have a really nice airport, though.
Mostly the advantage of Denver is that it's so close to the rocky mountains; when you get fed up with the soul-crushing horror of living in a big city you can head a few miles west and be alone on a mountain.
Although I do like it a bit more in the summer. There is some really cool stuff here, like Red Rocks and the airport, but it's still so mediocre...
CycloneRanger is right though, being so close to the mountains is pretty cool.
Posts
One would think. At Penn you're supposed to "kiss" under before you graduate
QEDMF xbl: PantsB G+
My college:
This is one of the engineering buildings for VCU but this is where most my classes reside.
Some city shots of downtown, where you'll either get mugged or be the victim of some crime near the capitol:
My favorite place in all of the city:
It's a nice quiet sushi bar, so on Thursday and parts of the weekend, this is where I go for drinks.
Alternatively, these are great spots as well:
The latter the place where I'm going to watch the World Cup this year.
Kind of a shithole.
The city's landmarks are SAMSON and GOLIATH:
...A pair of gantry cranes.
Yeah.
They live on the Harland and Wolff shipyard, which is famous for building the Titanic.
The Waterfront:
This is the Waterfront Hall, which sits in front of the Lagan. Somewhere nearby is this guy:
If you look closely, you'll see that the tiles he's made of have pictures in them; mostly history-related stuff.
A nice view of the river Lagan:
You can see those hills in the background from virtually anywhere in Belfast. It's a really small city.
Queen's University, which is officially called Queen's University Belfast, in case you forgot what city you were in:
One of the more iconic tall buildings (using the term "skyscraper" would be an insult to skyscrapers):
Belfast City Hospital. It's really near the university; I believe its med students train here.
I had a good view of this ugly motherfucker when I was in primary school.
The Botanic gardens:
One of Queen's physics buildings is visible in the background. I used to sit in there after school while I waited for my mother to finish her experiments.
The [strike]London Eye[/strike] Belfast Wheel:
I'm not sure if this thing is still up; I have a feeling they took it down recently. I never got a chance to see it. That building beside it is Belfast City Hall, and the grassy area in front of the hall is the offical teen goth hangout.
The Shankill road:
A shithole within a shithole. If you want to immerse yourself in Belfast's troubled past in the most boring yet dangerous way possible, this is the place to go.
Yeah a sad number of people in Northern Ireland are actually proud of our violent, ignorant heritage.
We have this:
A crazy one of these:
A surprisingly good beer:
It's hot in the summer, cold in the winter, caters mostly to skiers and Mormons, which I'm not.
I'll be living here soon:
http://www.suboptimist.com
Where I never got fish and chips come to think of it, just chips.
Lethbridge, AB, Canada. How quaint. How Canadian prairie chic.
The skyline from the university side of town.
The rail bridge that spans the length of the valley, sorry coulee, between the two sides of town. Built in the early 1900s, it was a great place to commit suicide from until they fenced off both sides of the bridge.
There's a casino! Yay!
And a university that has a building that looks like a space cruiser!
Another university picture.
And televisions outside in the winter?
What this thread makes me realize is that I go from living in one shithole to living in another shithole while others here live in the some of the most beautiful, important, cosmopolitan cities in the world.
Really, though, they built a big sculpture that is suspiciously reminiscent of the architecture from that show.
Anyway, more from Newton Centre:
City hall:
I live right by there. Anyway, you like hills? We've got some. I actually live at the base of the main one, Heartbreak Hill, which I claim the nation of Kenya has declared war on:
Here's the view from an intersection near my house.
This is Crystal Lake, as named by the ice company that claimed the ice was as clear as a crystal. It was first called Wiswall's Pond after Thomas Wiswall, who founded Cambridge and build his holmestead on the pond, then Baptist Pond because of the nearby church that used it for baptisms.
We have a number of historic buildings:
Newton Centre/Center Station, built in 1886 by Henry Hobson Richardson and Frederick Law Olmsted. Notice that the old sign uses a different spelling from the official signs:
The other side of the street is also significant:
Apperantly, my local power station is historical, most likely because it was built in 1904 by some guy named "Boston Edison."
This 1888 church is significant because of its distinctive architectural style and an event I'm too lazy to discover the nature of. Its predecessor was built in the colonial era and had a fairly prominant minister in the 1850's
One of our oldest houses is the Edward Durant house (1723). Apperantly, it's had a fair number of important owners, and has many very nice examples of colonial floor patterns. There are some very nice interior photos here.
Other houses (preceded by years):
Of course, I'm really close to the border with Newtonville. My high school, which is ten minutes away walking at a leasurely pace, is in Newtonville, as is the the house of my university's president (it comes with the position). Besides the high school, its main landmarks are an architecturally significant church and one of the country's first buildings to require the purchase of airspace (everyone drives under it, so it's a landmark):
It was better when it was a star market.
It's basically a small town dominated by a military base (Naval Shipyard), with a ferry link to Seattle. What you're seeing there is the waterfront, the marina, the downtown buildings, and the dank nasty run-down looking buildings of the shipyard on the lower left (and it extends quite a ways off the photo to the left).
We got boats!
I think those are actually the old busted shit...I used to run along the road you see up top when I lived on the west side, and standing close to one of those ships is actually pretty damn impressive. We've got at least one operating carrier (I think we're getting another).
More waterfront pictures!
Our city's current economic strategy seems to be "build condos on the waterfront, and pray that people are willing to deal with a 60-minute ferry commute to downtown Seattle." It worked. For a while. Not so much anymore since everything went to shit. Still, the waterfront district is nice. Then you run into a neverending sea of payday loan places, pawn shops, fast food, tattoo parlors, unmaintained houses, and general quasi-urban blight most of the way to the freeway (which heads down to Tacoma, via the Narrows, about a half-hour away).
In short, Bremerton is not a very nice place overall...but still, it has its charms. And you're really not that likely to be shot or stabbed.
Aerial view!
The middle is West Bremerton. Off to the right, over the bridges, is East Bremerton, which is marginally nicer. At least people who live there convince themselves of this. I live about a mile down the road (off the picture) from that bridge on the right. I live towards the top of a hill, and if I run to the top of it I can see the top of the Seattle skyline.
Oh, and we've got Olympic College, which from what I can tell is the inspiration for the hit show Community. It looks like a real community college's community college, if you know what I mean.
Yeah if you can pay 1400 each, then you have all sorts of options. If you're looking to split 1400 TOTAL, look at Bushwick. I'm splitting a really nice (two floors, backyard, dishwasher, roof access, etc) 1850 with four people, so we're all paying between 400 and 500 a month. It's close to the L and the JMZ.
wat
you can sleep in new york city for 500 bucks a month
mein gott
don't forget this, which is like 5 minutes from my house
also, when you look up urban sprawl on wikipedia, the picture is of a shopping center in one of the more soul sucking suburbs. go utah.
I present you Toronto:
We're the capital of Ontario and Canada's biggest city and commercial centre.
Our distinctive one-testicled Skyline:
The bright thing on the left is the SkyDome.
The big ass tower is the CN Tower. Formerly the tallest free standing structure on earth till those guys in Dubai built something or other. We're hoping to reclaim the title when that place collapses into an apocalyptic wasteland or something. It also changes colours alot.
Here's another picture: The thing in the foreground is Toronto Island, across from downtown.
Another neat picture of the downtown:
This is the City Hall. The area in front in Nathan-Phillips Square. It gets turned into an ice rink in the winter:
It's a really nice city. Very green, lots of plants and shit:
Like any large city, it all depends on where you live though.
Many attractions too:
This is the Ontario Science Centre. This place is awesome:
We've also got the 3rd largest zoo in the world. Here's some polar bears:
This is the gate for the CNE (Canadian National Exhibition): There's a big ass fair type thing there every august.
This is the ROM (Royal Ontario Museum) complete with it's new horrible cancerous growth that makes it look like it's being conquered by a race of viral robot aliens or something:
This is the AGO (Art Gallery of Ontario): Lots of art in there I hear or something. Maybe not, I don't know.
We also have giant ass malls. This is the Eaton's Centre:
Not technically in the city, but just north of it is Canada's Wonderland which I will mention cause it's awesome. More rollercoasters then any themepark outside of the US. They don't shit around with that non-going-fast stuff there:
There's a bunch of shit I'm sure I haven't included, but I'm tired now.
Currently living near Denver, Colorado, which isn't so bad, but it has to be the most average place on Earth.
The skyline's pretty neat I guess.
I dare all of you to find an uglier building.
I was born and spent about 18 Years here
Sligo, Ireland.
"Land of hearts desire" or so they claim.
Anyway, it's a dull town
but the scenery outside of it is pretty
For example this is pretty much the view out my kitchen window
Also the mountain in the first picture? That's knocknarae.
Ontop of it is this
This pile of stones is Queen Medb Cairn, where Medb, original cattle rustler and queen of Connacht is said to be buried.
Speaking of people who're buried in sligo, this is the church at drumcliff
Where W.B Yeats is buried
We also have some nice beaches - Strandhill (apparently very good for surfing)
And rosses point - which is just kinda pretty
since then , i've lived in
Limerick, Ireland
No. not that
This
Limerick has the unfortunate nickname of "stab city" in Ireland, but i decided to go there for university anyway
Still, it's got some cool stuff
Like King Johns Castle which was used in the multiple sieges of limerick
And the treaty stone
And speaking of university, i went to the University of Limerick
Which has these massive flagpoles, for no real reason
Ohh and keeping the castle theme, the area i lived was called castletroy, after this
and heres bunratty castle, which is just a massive touristy thing, and nowhere near as important as King Johns was, but it's still cool.
Dublin (already covered by Tav)
Dundee, Scotland
Which is home to the beano and dandy comics producers, DC Thomson.
And to prove how proud they are of it, there is a statue of 'Desperate Dan' in the middle of town
I was there for a Masters at the University of Abertay, Dundee
Which is probably best known for the place that Dave Jones went to, before he founded DMA design (they of Lemmings, GTA, etc) and Now Real Time Worlds, who are also located in Dundee.
Cardiff, Wales
Where i just farted about for a bit, but anyway
but it also has a castle!
which is right in the middle of Cardiff city and is pretty interesting.
Ohh and the rest of the town is no slouch either
Also, if you've ever watched New Dr.Who or it's spinoff Torchwood you'll probably recgnise a few places, especially in the case of torchwood
Like this, for example/
It's also got a bit of a reputation for being a rough night out, which is lies, the town is no better or worse than anwyhere else, but putting all the chippies on the same lane (known as chippy lane) was probably a bad idea.
But it's not as bad as it looks, i swear.
and now i'm here - The Isle of Wight, England.
Which is just across from Portsmouth (Hey Rhesus Positive! )
And i live here, Newport (which is not on the coast or has a port of any kind)
in fact the red brick building at the end of the street on the left hand side is where i work.
So far, the only interesting places i've found as the needles
Which is cool because back in the cold war it used to be a secret rocket testing facility for the British ICBM program
There's also godshill, which is a picturesque little town, complete with thatched roofs
And now I'd best get back to work....
On behalf of the hick cities: fuck you, Toronto. No one outside of the GTA likes you.
When I was a kid my parents used to drive 6 hours during their summer vacations to take us to Canada's Wonderland. I loved that place but haven't been there in over 15 years.
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I mean, I also have to pay 89 bucks a month for the subway, plus gas, electricity, and internet. So, no. Not really. But it's under 700!
But when I was growing up it changed to look like
Sadly, there was also a lot of violence at the schools. A teacher was stabbed by a student and my parents made the decision to move to Mansfield, MA. Mansfield looks like this
It's a white bread town full of suburban development. I'm pretty sure I'm friends with the only minority that lived there. Last year, I moved to Brockton, MA. Brockton at one point was famous for two things.
But Rocky died and the shoe factories moved overseas for cheaper labor. Brockton is now famous for something entirely different.
It's fun times!
Though it could be worse, you could live in Fall River with their rat problem. Ew.
i spent most of my youth in north easton
it was pretty pleasant
though i only went to school there through second grade, because i was a crazy ADD child so my parents felt private school would be better for me
but i lived there until 9th grade
though when i was a baby my parents lived in an apartment in quincy
Here is a view of the Ottawa skyline from the Museum of Civilisation in Gatineau
We have a nifty parliament building with a big tower known as the Peace Tower and nice rotunda library overlooking the Ottawa River
The Supreme Court of Canada is located just up Wellington Ave. from said parliament buildings
We also have some nifty museums
Nature: War:
As well as a funky gallery that has a budget item for drip buckets - I wonder why...
Ottawa is also known for it's many beautiful green spaces, canal, and giant arachnid
All-in-all, not a bad place to live if you like being in one of the coldest/snowiest National Capitals in the world...
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Plus... you know, Bushwick. Or as shady brokers call it "East Williamsburg".
In fairness, I just moved to Ass toria and it isn't much cooler.
You went to either Xavarian Bros. or Bishop Feehan.
And next time I need to go to Good Samaritan, I'll ask for "Shaz's dad"
My bf and his brother went to Xavarian.
Nope, that skyline's perfectly average. :P
I've always found Denver to be one of those larger cities where I can't really identify it from the skyline...like, nothing in it stands out to me. Phoenix would probably be another, if I hadn't lived there, though the B of A building stands out enough from the rest that maybe not. But even some smaller cities (like Tampa) have some distinctive enough buildings that they're easily identified. And obviously cities like S.F., L.A., Chicago, and New York are easy. And cities like Seattle, that have (relatively) tall landmarks (Space Needle). A waterfront helps too.
Perhaps I'm thinking way too much about this.
Mostly the advantage of Denver is that it's so close to the rocky mountains; when you get fed up with the soul-crushing horror of living in a big city you can head a few miles west and be alone on a mountain.
Here's one comparing it to some crazy road junction in Atlanta (where I used to live):
We don't need a luxurious skyline. We have the cash-register building.
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It also has this allegedly badass model of new urbanism that I want to check out some day.
I hear it's walkable as shit.
It's one of those cities that's better, in fact, on the streets than looking at it from the skyline.
Seriously, so many cool buildings and things to see while walking.
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Good weather?! pfft. it snows half the year here.
Although I do like it a bit more in the summer. There is some really cool stuff here, like Red Rocks and the airport, but it's still so mediocre...
CycloneRanger is right though, being so close to the mountains is pretty cool.
Yeah, but it typically melts within a day.