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  #1  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 7:51 PM
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Richmond: Pretty much all over




I was in Richmond two weeks ago for a wedding. When not being social, I was out taking pictures. While prepping those pictures I remembered that I had more photos of Richmond from a brief trip there last summer that I never got around to making public, so I combined the two sets into one big one.

Actually there are 5 sets, organized by location or topic. You can access them via flick if you want to see them all.

A selection is below.

If you don't know, although it's famous for being the capital of the Confederacy, Richmond is structurally a mid-Atlantic city. Urbanistically it shares much more in common with Washington, Baltimore and Harrisburg than the Carolina cities to its south. Although not as dense as its northern cousins, Richmond has a large downtown and extensive rowhouse/multifamily neighborhoods.

Let's move to pictures. I don't have any skyline overview type shots, so instead we'll start with my hotel from two weeks ago. We stayed at the Doubletree, which is west of downtown not quite all the way to The Fan. It had a rooftop pool.



... With a view.






Downtown. Richmond hasn't gentrified very much yet, so downtown is a mixed bag of glitzy office towers, restored historic rows, and 20th Century neglect.






























The James River flows through the city. On the downtown side there is an old industrial canal, which has been turned into a park. It's quite pleasant.






Oh hai, State House.



There is a variety of statues on the State House grounds. By far the most impressive is this one of Virginia native son George Washington.



Of course it wouldn't be Richmond without some Confederate generals. This one is Stonewall Jackson.



To the state's credit, they have tried to balance out some of the historic negativity with more honorable contemporary monuments, like this one memorializing the civil rights movements of the 1960s.



The Governor's Mansion.



I love me a water feature.




Shockoe Bottom is the neighborhood immediately east of downtown. It's historic and warehousy.










All right, now let's head the other way. This is The Fan, Richmond's most famous neighborhood. With such a variety of colorful rowhouses, it deserves the accolade.


















The next neighborhood west of The Fan is Carytown, which isn't as beautiful but has a fun shopping district.

You can see in some pictures that storefronts have been added to older rowhouses.







Yes, in case you are wondering. The urban cupcake phenomenon has reached Richmond.




The owner of this store is a crazy hippie anarchist who thinks the main problem with America today is that too many people vote (yes you read that right: too *many*), and is in complete denial about the extremely high likelihood that he would be put up against a wall and shot about 5 minutes after a petty warlord took over the anarchist utopia about which he dreams.



But at least his store was funny.




It's typically my tradition to include a lot of transit pictures with city threads. Unfortunately, Richmond's transit system is awful. If you're on Broad Street then buses are a reasonable option, but otherwise you better have a car.

Here's your basic bus.



Some of them are adorned with this sticker. I assume the standards by which APTA judges "best" are with regards to administration and organization rather than service, because honestly, the transit system sucks.




I traveled to/from Richmond via Amtrak from DC. Richmond has two stations.

Here is Staples Mill station, the larger of the two. It's probably one of the larger and more well-equipped AmShacks in the country, but it is definitely an AmShack. Like most of its peers, it is located out in the industrial nether lands of the suburbs, surrounded by plenty of parking.

Ugh. As you can see, I didn't bother getting off the train.



Then you have Main Street Station, which is right downtown. One of Richmond's vintage depots, Main Street Station was recently restored and has been poaching customers from Staples Mill ever since. Unfortunately it isn't served by as many trains as Staples Mill, so it hasn't caught up yet.

It is completely gorgeous.





Gorgeous yes, but also small. Here is the main waiting room. There are bathrooms and vending machines, but the lack of shops or restaurants is a bummer.



One cool thing is that its train shed is still in tact.



Unfortunately, the shed is closed off. Not enough demand. Instead, trains use the outside tracks and just stop by the side of the building.








That's all!

Watch for threads from me from Charlotte and Greenville later in the week.
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  #2  
Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:17 PM
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Interesting that you took Amtrak to Richmond. Our class at George Mason recently completed a cost/benefit analysis of improving Amtrak service between DC and Richmond's Main Street Station. We proposed improving the speed from the current 42 mph average speed to an average speed of 70 mph.

http://policy.gmu.edu/portals/0/pdfs/TPO..._Washington_Richmond_High_Speed_Rail.pdf
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:18 PM
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Looks like a nice place!!
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:20 PM
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202: I assume you're aware of the high speed rail grant? New tracks for a portion of the DC/Richmond route. Very exciting, although still a far cry from Acela.
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:22 PM
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Correct-- the improvements we proposed included new track, grade separations and new infrastructure such as bridges. No electrification, however.
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:23 PM
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If I can get up early one of these days, I'd like to take a day trip to Richmond. I've lived in DC for over seven yrs now and haven't been past Fredricksburg on I-95.
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:38 PM
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Love Richmond.
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 8:54 PM
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Quite impressive. Thanks!
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 9:29 PM
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[fistpump]Yes![/fistpump]
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 11:11 PM
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AHHHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhh... ...home. Really really thanks for sharing.
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Old Posted Jun 7, 2010, 11:21 PM
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Very nicely done. It's an excellent city.
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Old Posted Jun 8, 2010, 12:29 AM
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Nice thread. I've long been interested by Richmond. This merely adds to it!
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  #13  
Old Posted Jun 8, 2010, 5:35 PM
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Well done!!
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Old Posted Jun 8, 2010, 6:52 PM
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Beautiful city.
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  #15  
Old Posted Jun 8, 2010, 7:06 PM
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Richmond is really a great city. Extremely beautiful!
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Old Posted Jun 8, 2010, 11:54 PM
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An under appreciated city by much of the U.S. Great tour Cirrus, and the Main Street station is a gem. Thanks.
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Old Posted Jun 9, 2010, 12:13 AM
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Very gorgeous. Thanks for sharing the character of Richmond, VA....I think you did an awesome job at capturing what I've seen in pictures of some of those areas. The Amtrak photos were very nice as well.
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  #18  
Old Posted Jun 9, 2010, 3:07 AM
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Good representation of my hometown. I remember when Main St. Station was briefly a mall in the 80s. It didn't last long.

I saw Sonic Youth once on Brown's Island, the park across the canal.
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Old Posted Jun 9, 2010, 12:59 PM
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Gwar's hometown!!! i love Richmond and we don't see enough of it on here.

i may have to stay at that hotel sometime.

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Old Posted Jun 9, 2010, 5:26 PM
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Good stuff. Love those rooftop skyline shots.

I just drove through Virginia last weekend going from Georgia to Fairfax. I would've loved to stop in Richmond but didn't have any time.
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