Quote:
Originally Posted by rousseau
Hamilton is a whole lot of "about to." It's been that way for years. Always the potential, never the fruition. It can get frustrating after a while.
|
It's true, but Hamilton also had a huge whole to fill. The implosion of steel and other manufacturing would have destroyed most cities, but Hamilton's managed to replace those jobs with others in things like health care/sciences. This was never going to be a quick transition.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rousseau
I like hearing nice things about Hamilton. I grew up there, and am really subjective and conflicted about it. Overall I find that it lets you down more than it gives you in terms of urban vibe and architecture, but that's probably just me.
|
I also agree that Hamilton is the most under rated city in the country. When I moved to Toronto all I heard were bad things about Hamilton. A few years later I decided to go look for myself expecting an ugly boring place full of strip malls and terrible architecture. It's the exact opposite. Bits of it almost felt like Brooklyn.
I remember loving Hamilton the second I got there and realized the negativity was mostly due to snotty white collar Torontonians looking down upon a blue collar city. Sure Hamilton needs some investment, but the rest was a refreshing surprise. Great buildings, love the escarpment, love the industrial feel of the city, love the Ti-Cats, love the down to earth people who actually talk to you, and love how Hamiltonians seem to know who they are. Torontonians don't seem to. Being in Hamilton was very grounding.
Toronto may be more sophisticated than Hamilton, but I'll always love the charming realness of Hamilton over the eager to impress pretension of Toronto. It's Toronto's biggest flaw.