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  #1  
Old Posted Jun 12, 2009, 5:15 PM
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The Hammer welcomes you

The Hammer welcomes you

Micro-metropolis Hamilton often referred to as a ‘big, small city’

Rafael Brusilow 11 June 2009 02:27 for metrocanada.ca vancouver

Like two halves of a vibrant dichotomy, opposites attract in Hamilton.

Towering, green trees mingle with office towers while sixth-generation Canadians share a coffee and some laughs with newly arrived residents from far-off lands. The new gives nod to the old as art-deco buildings stand watch while GPS-guided busses stop just outside their doors. Tranquil, hillside retreats look down on a bustling city in transformation that continually seems to challenge the status quo. Defying expectations is what Hamilton does best.

Affectionately referred to as “The Hammer” by its residents and nicknamed “Steeltown” by outsiders for its legacy of steel and manufacturing industries, the city of Hamilton is a micro-metropolis offering the fixings of a bigger city with the setting and laid-back attitude befitting a more peaceful refuge.

Split right through its middle by the majestic Niagara Escarpment, the city benefits from two completely different personalities melded together — one, a relaxing community of hillside mansions and cosy houses far more comfortable and charming than one should be able to afford for the money; the other, a fast-paced metropolitan core comprising Canada’s ninth-largest city.

“We really have a unique geography with the escarpment that divides the city. Some days in winter it snows at the top of the escarpment while it rains down below,” said Neil Everson, Hamilton’s director of economic development and real estate.

In day-to-day matters, Hamilton is like a microcosm of much larger, louder cities.

“A lot of people refer to us as a ‘big, small city’,” Everson said.

A plentiful variety of restaurants offering world, exotic fare provides the same gastronomic opportunities as gourmand-friendly metropolises like Toronto and Montreal. The hopping bars and nightclubs of Hess Village heat up Lower Hamilton with plenty of possibilities for good-natured mayhem. The hockey-loving city may soon even get its own NHL franchise if legal wrangles get resolved to transplant the ailing Phoenix Coyotes team to the city.

According to Everson, two-thirds of new homes sold in Hamilton are being snatched up by Torontonians looking for more comfort and quiet than they could afford for the same price in Toronto. Offering affordable housing with less than an hour of commuting time to Toronto proper with a full schedule of GO Train service to Toronto starting in 2012, it’s no surprise life in Hamilton has been enticing residents from across the GTA.

For resident Katelyn Brown, 21, who has lived her whole life in the city, Hamilton is a hub where disparate things converge.

“There’s different cultures here, different everything. It’s a midpoint for a lot of things,” Brown said.

Hamilton’s cultural diversity often surprises people accustomed to thinking of the city as a homogenous, blue-collar town. According to the 2006 Canadian Census, more than one-fifth of the city’s current population was born outside of Canada, making Hamilton the third-most diverse city in Canada behind Toronto and Vancouver.

Fred Eisenberger, mayor of Hamilton, says the city’s multi-cultural population shows people recognize the myriad of possibilities life in Hamilton offers.

“I think people see Hamilton as a place of great opportunity and a place that has really embraced diversity,” Eisenberger said.

If the current multi-culturalism of Steeltown is any surprise, the plentiful parks and green spaces around the city might come as an outright shock to uninitiated observers expecting a utilitarian landscape of sprawling asphalt and looming metal spires in what was once Canada’s manufacturing capital.

“We have a vast array of green spaces and open areas — it’s all towards enhancing the beauty of the city. For me, the green setting is what I love most about Hamilton,” Hamilton mayor Fred Eisenberger, said.

Best of The Hammer
Where to go, what to do

• Best place to feed the birds: Gore Park, at the heart of the city’s downtown core;

• Best make-out spot: Sam Lawrence Park, overlooking a breathtaking view of the city. Park your car and enjoy the view before locking lips;

• Best place for a walk: Bruce Trail, a long network of walking trails that snake through some of Hamilton’s greenest areas;

• Best coffee joint: The Bad Dog Cafe — cosy and friendly, with coffee that has bite;

• Best sports bar: Frisco’s Eatery and Sports Bar — dip into their first-class wings;

• Best street: Lower James Street, with its bushy, healthy trees flanking motorists and pedestrians alike as it spears its way across the city, from the waterfront to the escarpment. Great shopping, too.

http://www.metronews.ca/vancouver/li...r-welcomes-you
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  #2  
Old Posted Jun 12, 2009, 6:17 PM
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great find. good article.
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  #3  
Old Posted Jun 13, 2009, 2:39 AM
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Excellent article.

It's nice to see someone who actually visited the city before writing about it. I get real tired of all the stereotypical nonsense written about this city by people who have never actually been here. A good example of the bad reporting was just today in the National Post in an article about the NHL possibly comming here. The writer called the manager of the Prince Edward Tavern from Toronto to get there opinion on the Coyotes possible move here. They used all the typical steelworker blue collar stereotypical crap to describe this city.
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Old Posted Jun 13, 2009, 2:59 AM
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Good article, this is more like how I try to describe Hamilton to people, and why I found it a great place to live.
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  #5  
Old Posted Jun 13, 2009, 6:02 AM
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That two-thirds stat about Toronto buyers is surprising - are there other stats along those lines to back it up.

Overall, I like the perspective it takes - it echoes a lot of the reasons I love the city. And the Bad Dog must be thrilled at the publicity they've got!

My sister's in Vancouver - I've asked if she can find a paper copy of this if there's still one somewhere.
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  #6  
Old Posted Jun 13, 2009, 12:30 PM
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Originally Posted by emge View Post
That two-thirds stat about Toronto buyers is surprising - are there other stats along those lines to back it up.

Overall, I like the perspective it takes - it echoes a lot of the reasons I love the city. And the Bad Dog must be thrilled at the publicity they've got!

My sister's in Vancouver - I've asked if she can find a paper copy of this if there's still one somewhere.
Both my sister and myself have sold our houses to people from Toronto. Both in 3 days for very close to what we where asking. My sister had moved back to Hamilton 5 years ago after living in Toronto for 20 years. They have move to James Street north into the heart of the arts district (they are very artsy). They are renting one of John Mokrycke's places and love it so much they are thinking of buy around there. They have friends from Toronto that have or are considering moving to Hamilton.
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Old Posted Jun 13, 2009, 11:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by emge View Post
That two-thirds stat about Toronto buyers is surprising - are there other stats along those lines to back it up.

Overall, I like the perspective it takes - it echoes a lot of the reasons I love the city. And the Bad Dog must be thrilled at the publicity they've got!

My sister's in Vancouver - I've asked if she can find a paper copy of this if there's still one somewhere.
Since January 1, 2008 there has been 4 homes for sale on our part of the street that has 18 homes. 3 of the 4 (including ours) were purchased by people from Toronto and the 4th by people from Guelph.
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  #8  
Old Posted Jun 14, 2009, 11:11 PM
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Originally Posted by LikeHamilton View Post
Both my sister and myself have sold our houses to people from Toronto. Both in 3 days for very close to what we where asking. My sister had moved back to Hamilton 5 years ago after living in Toronto for 20 years. They have move to James Street north into the heart of the arts district (they are very artsy). They are renting one of John Mokrycke's places and love it so much they are thinking of buy around there. They have friends from Toronto that have or are considering moving to Hamilton.
This is always encouraging to read
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  #9  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2009, 12:56 PM
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Originally Posted by bigguy1231 View Post
A good example of the bad reporting was just today in the National Post in an article about the NHL possibly comming here.
That article notwithstanding, some of the best writing about Hamilton to date, has been in the National Post.

http://www.nationalpost.com/story.html?id=953569
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  #10  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2009, 1:50 PM
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Originally Posted by highwater View Post
That article notwithstanding, some of the best writing about Hamilton to date, has been in the National Post.
So I clicked on your link, and the first thing I was greeted with was: "Auchmar is a neo-Gothic villa in the Durand district."

It's not a bad piece, but why is it so hard for people to get simple things right?
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  #11  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2009, 9:46 PM
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the strangest thing happened yesterday.. strange, but great.

i met out out of nowhere some kids (19-year-old "kids") from Alabama on the weekend who were passing through Hamilton and decided to stay a few days.

They had flown into Buffalo with the goal of backpacking/hitch-hiking up to Quebec City, and decided to stop in Hamilton on the way, even though "everyone" said it was "dirty" and there was "nothing to see". They ended up loving the city - they went to the Art Crawl on Friday, visited some waterfalls today - yesterday I walked with them up to the waterfront and around the Dundurn grounds yesterday, and spent an hour or so with them today in the International Village area. By Sunday they already had people to stay with the entire time and hosting them for dinner.

I'm glad they didn't let the rumours stop them... now they're saying good things about Hamilton all the way back to Alabama of all places!
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  #12  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2009, 9:51 PM
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Hey that's awesome.

I've got a friend from the UK who is doing her post-doc at McMaster and seriously she's been exploring this city more than I have. Today she was telling how she went to Gage Park over the weekend and loved the park, guess there was some Turkish event taking place over the weekend.
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  #13  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2009, 6:13 AM
bigguy1231 bigguy1231 is offline
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Originally Posted by highwater View Post
That article notwithstanding, some of the best writing about Hamilton to date, has been in the National Post.

http://www.nationalpost.com/story.html?id=953569
Thanks for the link. Excellent article.

It's good to see that the word is getting out. Unfortunately for every positive story we still get 3 or 4 bad ones. But it takes time to change mindsets. Hopefully, that happens sooner rather than later.
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