
... Philly gettin love in here
Damn what a difference a super bowl makes
75 percent of Philly threads on here used to be about the dustiness of the city and its dusty inhabitants
Y’all dudes are worst than females
Chicago is the third largest city in the US bruh.
- The one of the most busiest airports in the world is in Chicago
-One of the most visited places in the world
- Willis Tower is the second tallest building in the US
- Lake Michigan is fukking awesome in the summertime
And I’m not even from Chicago. Tell em
@Barnett114 @Marti
He had to be trolling ... Chi’s moniker has been “America’s Third City” ... and my personal favorite so far.
It’s a gritty, classic metropolis that still has traces of its industrial roots. Just a dope city.
A lot of these new growth million plus (and near milion plus) population cities are primarily sprawl and suburbs. Can’t ever compete with a classic metropolis.
...DC's population is steady growing while Philly and BMore is stagnant.
List of metropolitan statistical areas - Wikipedia
Profound observation low key that a lot of people will glaze over.
BMore is actually in the red... they’ve lost more residents than they’ve gained as of late.
Out of the the top 10 most populous cities in the U.S., Chicago and Philly have the lowest percent change of new residents moving in the city. But they’re still not in the red.
And while we’re at it, when it comes to new residents added, ALL of the old, historical, high density east coast metros severely lag the newer, sprawly, larger land mass cities ... except for Boston
I’d really like the know the demo of those who are taking flight from the old, dense metros to the sprawling, newer, larger land mass cities.
Houston, Phoenix, San Antonio and Dallas are the most populous cities in the top 10 getting the most new residents... by faaaar. All have double digit +percent change.
Y’all can say what y’all want about how Desireable y’all cities are... but numbers—on the surface— are telling a different story .
Philly is being gentrified now
... I thought Philly's black areas would be one of the more resistant to gentrification ... say it ain’t so man
