![]() |
Quote:
|
Certainly Denver and Salt Lake City are not Sun Belt cities as others have mentioned here.
Los Angeles probably was the first "Sun Belt" city when it experienced tremendous growth around the middle of the 20th Century, but it already was a city of 1.5 million people before WW2 even began let alone post war, and therefore looks and feels different from the Sun Belt cities of today. Sure anybody can point out similarities between any 2 cities in North America regardless of what artificial region they are placed. |
Quote:
The Sunbelt is the Sunbelt and will remain it regardless of what happens (short of maybe an ice age or nuclear winter). The defining characteristics are "no winters, and palm trees". |
Quote:
|
I wonder how much this would sell for... it was boarded up at the time of the last Street View a few months ago:
(wonder if it comes with the mid-1980s Toyota in the driveway) https://www.google.com/maps/@37.3883...7i16384!8i8192 |
Ugh. The housing stock in Silicon Valley, generally speaking, sucks.
It's one thing to pay millions for a special property, but crap like that should be demolished (and yeah, I get that no one is actually paying for the structure; only the land matters). |
Overall which is Honolulu more expensive than the Bay Area or the other way around?
|
Quote:
To me the sunbelt is: Phoenix Orange County San Diego Tucson Vegas St George Prescott Palm Springs Lake Havasu Tampa Bay down to Naples Miami Orlando Daytona and Cocoa Beach Santa Fe Key West Maybe: Hawaii Albuquerque Texas Hill Country Rio Grande Valley Pensacola Savannah to Hilton Head Charleston LA in terms of the core city. The following are NOT the sunbelt in my opinion: El Paso Jacksonville Houston Dallas Mobile New Orleans Bay Area CA Central Valley |
:???: Houston/ Dallas not sunbelt?
|
Quote:
Houston and Dallas - NOT sunbelt, but L.A. (core city) - maybe Sunbelt. :rolleyes: Sure thing. :koko: |
Quote:
Houston is a blue collar southern port city which became the undisputed global center of its chief industry, oil and chemicals. Dallas was an old school plains/middle America banking and commercial center not unlike Kansas City that became a corporate heavyweight. Nothing about either was ever sunbelt, ever. Houston is way too working class and Dallas is too business focused, and the latter has somewhat cool winters. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
https://www.redfin.com/CA/Sunnyvale/...5/home/1092636 I guess construction costs in Silicon Valley are so high that you may as well just keep the modest cookie-cutter design and make it nicer... otherwise just buy something bigger that already exists. |
And I'm in a position to answer my own earlier question now - that piece of crap house, in a condition where it needs a total rehab, would sell for $800k-$900k at the very least.
|
Again, you guys are making this Sunbelt definition thing so anally specific as if the term can only include fast growing locales in the South. If you want to do that, fine, but you’re still be anally specific.
The Sunbelt is essentially the Southern half of the lower 48. That map from Wikipedia is more or less what it is and all the cities that are Sunbelt are in it as well. It has rich expensive cities as well as poor cheap ones and everything in between. It can include working class towns as well as party tourist cities. Not sure why it should have a more exact definition. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
hell I live in a 1965 updated mid century building |
These cheap (when built), car-oriented early 1950s homes in Sunnyvale are the epitome of Sunbeltness to me.
|
Quote:
http://spineprint.co/wp-content/uplo...ve-phoenix.jpg |
The sunbelt around here refers to American places for snowbirds to go. So Phoenix, Florida, and Palm Springs.
Looks like everyone on this forum has their own definition. |
^Deep front yard, wide street frontage, three-letter address. Where is that?
|
Quote:
|
There are houses like that in Ohio, which we might all agree is like the anti-sunbelt.
I think words like sunbelt, rust belt, bible belt, etc, are loaded terms that mean something particular. The sunbelt therefore cannot just be literally half the country. It can't just mean any place that had some sunbelt traits, it has to mean places that were fundamentally shaped by certain forces that correspond to certain eras in American history that have some cultural and political overtones as well. To me, "sunbelt" is a way of characterizing places that grew quickly at the peak of the postwar economic mobility by selling a certain lifestyle or aura to a certain generation of Americans. They'd have at least most of these traits: 1. An economy that has grown in spite of being mostly low-wage services or tourism focused(Florida). Or, places that developed things like a strong foundation of white collar jobs or prestigious universities only after a lot of people started moving there(San Diego). All the wealth was made outside and then imported. 2. Attractive to members of the Boomer and Greatest Generation who wanted to live in a particular type of suburbia and liked particular forms of leisure activities that have since become sort of passe elsewhere, like golf. 3. A retirement destination for old-school style snowbirds. Is there a Del Webb master planned community in the metro area? Are there manicured communities for 55+ people to toodle around in golf carts? 4. A lot of real estate investment is bubblicious. Places that saw the greatest overall riches to rags decline after the Great Recession. 5. A certain kind of sedentary vacationing and conference travel is a selling point. 6. Finally, the sun part. But specifically, sunny places that are either deserts with desert scenery and zero humidity or sunny places that are beachy and have palm trees. Not just any old subtropical or desert climate can do. |
Good effort but still not hair-splittingly specific enough for this forum.
|
Post WW2, lots of domestic inflow, cookie cutter, southern half of country, generally cheaper than established coast and large population gains within a generation.
At least that’s my take. Denver and Salt Lake City live on the edges of the Sunbelt and qualify due to being strong in at least 3 of the criteria listed. Jackson, Memphis and Albuquerque are Sunbelt because they are deep within the four corners of Phoenix, Vegas, Raleigh and Miami (Soon to be Orlando). |
Quote:
|
Off-topic but why do so many homes have such large front yards? No one uses it. Its such a waste. Is it just so the drive way can be longer?
|
I am too lazy to read this entire quarrelsome thread, but surely somebody posted about the origins of the term "Sun Belt" by now. If not, there is this: https://www.thoughtco.com/sun-belt-i...states-1435569
|
Quote:
If you've not used your front yard you are missing out.:tup: |
Quote:
|
Regarding front yards, consumers like the curb appeal of a house being set back from the loud noisy, dangerous street. People generally don't want other people lurking around right outside their windows.
For anybody who has ever lived in a ground floor apartment in the city, then you would understand why people like to have a front yards whether they use the or not. Most use their backyards -- pool, bbq, fire pit etc. |
Quote:
our building has a small front yard (all of about 350 SF of grass), and since our back "yard" is just a small patio tucked in between the back decks and the parking pad on the alley, our kids actually do play in our front yard all the time. it's not uncommon at all to see children playing in the front yard/sidewalk/parkway in my neighborhood. backyards are either so tiny or non-existant (and chopped up with fences anyway) that the front of the buildings is usually the largest open space for kids to run around, ride scooters, toss a football, splash around in a wading pool, build a snowman, etc. |
I cant think of a better example of a stark difference when it comes to people inside and outside of the urban bubble.
In most places around the world asking why people like big yards would make their eyes cross.:haha: Its like asking why people like eating or sleeping. |
Quote:
|
I have a decent size front and back yard. both used to be wide open green space which was great for kids to play and dogs to poop. and sometimes the other way around.
but I recently had the front redesigned to be more water-friendly, and the back I converted to a small garden with fruit trees and berry bushes. both are a massive improvement over the bland swath of grass they once were. but mostly my front yard carries one purpose: for me to yell at young people to get the #@!$ off of it. :sly: |
Quote:
http://giphygifs.s3.amazonaws.com/me...1WatQ4/200.gif |
Even though maybe not the best urban feature, yards do serve a purpose: they absorb water. They are very important in subtropical and tropical places that have high rainfall.
Otherwise, flooding can be a really big issue. In São Paulo, there are some neighborhoods with little area for absorption. This coupled with torrential summer storms and steep hills = streets turning into waterfalls that can sometimes take cars down with them. In the neighborhoods with yards, this almost never happens. |
Dallas will be number two. It has the least amount of encumbrances; natural disaster, high prices, high heat, intense nimbyism, tax unfriendly....texas is the new California without the progressive politics and lower prices.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I should have been more specific.
This: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8651...7i16384!8i8192 or this: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8568...7i13312!8i6656 is not this: https://www.google.com/maps/@36.8328...7i13312!8i6656 Trust me, I didn't get a ground-level apartment because of noise. I understand the issues. I don't think its weird Americans don't prefer Philly style row homes but I think front yards, overall, are too large. As far as actually using their yards, most people prefer privacy, you don't get that in the front yard. Also, more backyards are fenced than front yards, so people are more likely to trust their kids running around there or their dogs. Point? People use their backyards more, we all know this. Most people anyways. So the huge football field front yard makes zero sense to me. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Texas definitely has the space to continue to grow rapidly this century. |
^^^^^
Too much size. The state is bigger than France. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Californians leaving California seem to think Texas is the next best thing. That was their top destination last year. Of the nearly 700k people who left, 10 percent ended up in Texas. Business also sees the writing on the wall as more and companies move their headquarters and large office dependent operations. I read somewhere genentech laid off about 300 workers in the south bay. Guess where 300 new genentech workers magically ended up? Portland , two floors below me where office space is a third of bay area prices....
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 9:10 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.