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While most of the Bay Area really does look like the Sunbelt (especially the outer East Bay and South Bay), SF itself does not. In addition, whenever there is a warm, hot summer day, there is usually a really cool night (unlike anywhere else in the sunbelt) where it could be above 90 but also be below 50 on the same day.
It is the first Sunbelt Mega City so of Course it's more mature and dense than the others. DC is in a unique situation being the capital and more planned so I won't put it in the equation. Miami is the next most dense, but it is also one of the most physically constrained large city. Houston is next up.
In my opinion, I think Los Angeles, Dallas-Fort Worth, & Atlanta are making the greatest strides for better transit systems also. 01-02-2011, 01:37 PM. Dallaz. Location: Dallas,Texas. 6,690 posts, read 9,935,924 times. Reputation: 3448. DART has 72 miles of track, but the ridership is kinda low.
Reputation: 18602. Quote: Originally Posted by btownboss4. One of the big reasons people prefer the Rust belt is supposedly the old industrial cities offer an urban lifestyle you can’t find in the Sunbelt. But my argument is between the growth of the sunbelt and the depopulation of the Rustbelt that it’s not really true anymore.
The Rust Belt cities didn't stop annexing because they stopped growing. They stopped annexing because every inch of available land around them had incorporated. They couldn't annex anymore. The majority of the sunbelt cities are in states where Surburban areas incorporating on a core city border is far less common.
The only non rust-belt city that can match rust-belt architecture is New York. Both the average rust belt and sun belt city tend to have a solid middle class, with not too many extraordinarily rich people living there. Chicago and LA are both world class cities with tons of white collar/high income residents.
Pensacola, FL 32504 Find on map >> Owner: SUNBELT IPF LLC Total market value for property: $106,875 Land value: $106,875 Property use: Vacant Commercial Assessments for tax year: 2010 Land usage: Commercial Lot Land size: 24,393 square feet Sales: Date: 08/01/2004 Book/page: 5475/0573 Price: $152,600
Tucker, GA 30084 Find on map >> Owner: SUNBELT CAPITAL PARTNERS LLC Land value: $321,900 Building value: $1,091,900 Miscellaneous improvements value: $44,000 Total value for property: $1,457,800 Property type: Industrial improvements Assessments for tax year: 2009 Land area: 132,422 square feet Last sale date: 09/15/2005 Year property was built ...
Originally Posted by Mutiny77. "Sun Belt" refers to both a geographic region and a particular type of urban growth/development pattern in postwar America. New Orleans, Birmingham, and Memphis are questionable on the second point to varying extents. The same is true of the Rust Belt which is why Midwestern cities like Columbus, Indianapolis, and ...
Many Sunbelt cities have a great opportunity to do a lot of infill in their lower density cores by adding mixed forms of housing. What will also be something to watch out for is if the whole missing-middle housing takes over on some of the larger SFH lots you find in some cities there.