It's near enough the big city that I can go do fun things when I want, but it's quiet here and not a lot of traffic.
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Same for mine! I have multiple big cities around me to choose from without having to live in a big city. I also have access to the airports in those big cities, which is also a big plus.
That youβre never far from the ocean. Also itβs very safe and clean, and highly walkable and cyclable.
You can walk eveywhere in a short amount of time. I have and outdoor market, a buchers' market, a greengrocer, and at least 3 supermarkets, 3 corner stores, 2 confectioneries/ice cream shops, multiple flower shops, hairdressers, etc. within a 3-4 minute walk. It's not any sort of major metropolis, it's a town of ~17 000 people with no building taller than 5 stories.
That sounds π amazing
Nice climate. Walkable (and safe). Good transit. World famous for weird lefty politics, science, free software, and psychedelia.
Walkable city and good transit are pretty awesome. Safe bike paths would be cool too.
That chunk of Hopkins is trouble either way, it seems to me.
The food.
Probably one of the safest cities to be in during an earthquake, all the buildings that were going to fall down already have done (Christchurch NZ).
laughs in Santiago.
^2010, 8,8, Very strong laws, seismic culture.^
I live in Flensburg, Germany at the border to denmark. Everything here has a scandinavian flair. Nice, old buildings. Beautiful little streets. Beaches. People are really nice...
Yeah. I like living here.
Some Pictures I took in recent Years
The city is gorgeous! There are big lakes right in the middle of everything. Some of the residential areas are covered with forest, despite the houses. There's a lot of interesting architecture. Bike paths that are separate from the roads run throughout town and get plowed in the winter.
People are friendly and helpful. Weirdness is seen as a good thing. Local politics run far left and activist, which suits me. The winters are real, but beautiful. I love it here all year round.
Is this Bergen? It sounds like Bergen.
I'm in Madison, Wisconsin, USA, but Bergen is now on my list of places I need to see. :-)
Just about everything - by the water, friendly neighbours, short walk to my favourite activity, half hour bus ride to a wonderful city.
I used to live in said city and travel to my town fairly often, and I remember walking along my street and saying, "those houses look like they'd be nice to live in". I've been living in one of those houses for over 20 years now and yes, it is very nice.
Great big city with a "small-town feel". You can also find restaurants that are pretty good to replicate most culinary backgrounds.
That I'm leaving
We have more or less everything you'd want (pool, cinema, library, shopping, restaurants, a small theather, parties/events, decent public transportation, i think some sports too (i don't care), some nice rewilded spots, walkable/cyclable dimensions) but it's still pretty quiet.
I grew up in a typical suburb, but I moved for a job to one of the largest cities in the world. I love it here. I'm in walking distance of a metro station on the main line through town. On the way there I pass a lot of small shops selling everything I would ever need. Above the station there's a 5-story mall with a movie theater, restaurants, everything really. There's so much to do here, every weekend there's something new to discover.
That being said, I'm considering a move to Tokyo in the next few years because I enjoy large cities so much.
It's very walkable. I can get to most places easily or just take a stroll around the neighborhood.
I feel extremely safe here. It is walkable and transit is excellent.
Birds singing. I live in a small town even though I prefer spending time in large cities. But this is what I miss when I'm out. Well, this and fresh air.
Our metro parks are absolutely incredible!
I like the wildlife. Kangaroos, possums, birds. Heaps of birds. When I check my security cameras at work, all I hear are the birds chirping.
We live in a little town right on the outskirts of the state capital. Everything is in walking or biking distance - supermarkets, doctors, schools. We live close to a river and have a few smaller nature reserves nearby. There's a lot of different activities the kids can do. The neighborhood is a good mixture of older couples and young families.
It's not the prettiest place on earth, but I'm happy we're settled here.
We have a really nice park, a great diner, a great dog grooming shop, and a kickass ice cream place. It's also close to everything I need but also rural.
We have tons of stuff to do all year. From hosting a groundhog's day, pride parade, jazz concerts, comedians, and such. Biking could be better, but we are trying.
Entheogenic plants are legal.
We almost unanimously, as a city of about half a million people, despise the Tories. The whole country could turn blue and we'd still be red.
Manchester?
Liverpool duh, half a mill is the second clue
Oi! The other one.
Lots of green areas and the river and lake. It feels nice to walk around.
By a local law all building (Except for a few deparments) cant have more than 2 floors, so the moment that you are in a 2nd floor roof you can see a big part of the town. And in that line, there is an abandoned building with 8 floors that if you climb to the top you can see the WHOLE town.
Nothing happens , if it wasn't for the internet I wouldn't know if anything of consequence is happening at all. Is small you can walk the whole thing in about 3 hours or so, theres's either rain or sunshine no more.
That sounds so North American. Small and three hours doesn't quite match. It takes me 45 minutes to walk around my entire town. And there are much smaller towns close by.
Oh yeah maybe so. I have only lived in cities before, so this is small because is the smallest place I have lived in, but maybe is a medium size town? I don't have any other personal references so idk what's the right label π
PS Not North America.
- My grandma lives here
- Mountains and forest to one side, flat to the other - gives you both
- Good size of having everything more than enough but everything being reachable by bicycle at the same time (although I mainly walk)
My closest neighbor is almost 1000' away.
Just moved here. It's small, kind of rural and therefore very quiet. I grew up in a rural area but for the last 25 years or so I've lived in various larger towns and cities. It's nice to be back in a quiet, rural area again. Plus, you can drive golf carts on public streets so I can jump in one, and cover the whole town in about an hour for a nice pleasant drive.
I always dreaded the idea of living in the suburbs, but over covid we needed to move and i'm so glad we moved to our city. it's an older first tier suburb so there's a lot of diversity here. there's an African market down the street and a Mexican bodega in the other direction. There's tons of spots that are locally owned, the sorta places you wouldn't find further out in the burbs where everything is a chain. We're also only about a 10 minute drive from our old house to so it's easy to visit our old haunts from time to time.
Weβve been USA Todayβs best βsmall beer townβ for years and can walk to 6 different breweries in <30min. Plus weβre walkable to a train station which gets us to the events in the city proper in 20 minutes.
I don't really like it (not that I dislike it). It just makes sense to be here for the work and the public transportation in case I don't have a car for any length of time
Chippy Lane
The oatcakes
"Oh you're from place? What do you do out there?" "We leave and go to the next town over."
This was a conversation I had numerous times. But in the end I grew up in a town where you pretty much got left alone and that was nice.
I've since moved to a different town that's about as uninteresting.
I like here, there is always something going on to keep you entertained.
I get left alone for the most part. Not many people.
The only things I like about the city I live in now is that I can walk to more places than I could where I lived previously, and if I can't I can actually get delivery service for almost anything.
But I miss the small town I came from. I miss the quiet and actually feeling safe to go for a walk at night.