Originally Posted by
Rover
It seems like in NYC, Boston, Chicago, etc., the residents in the "urban" areas tend to use private clubs for working out, swimming, etc. and the , real coffee houses, clubs and restaurants for getting together and hanging out. The corner bakery becomes a gathering point in the morning, the street-side and sidewalk tables at restaurants the places to watch and greet each other, and the clubs to go partying at night. For families the little pocket parks are often safe havens for the them to sit and play a little, (also for the more matured). Adaptive uses of places like the High Line park in NYC are great. I just think (and even understanding the cultural differences) that the "urban" richness and lifestyle is not just sub-urban placed downtown. It is a lifestyle. It is that lifestyle that creates demand for the bakeries, local small restaurants, cool urban clubs, intimate little shops, etc. Sitting by the pool and drinking beers out of your cooler does little to add to the mosaic that should be urban living. If everyone who professes wanting the lifestyle and to be "cool" would actually act "cool", it would develop. Being urban isn't just cool names,body art and a low numbered address.
Just my observations, fwiw
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