OT - Where would you want to live?

Submitted by NYC Fan3 on

I've always valued insights from members on this board and am interested in hearing about cities members prefer to live in.

Let's say you are given a promotion at work and your company is willing to pay all moving expenses and adjust your cost of living to any city in the United States.  Where are you moving to and why?

wildbackdunesman

April 9th, 2018 at 3:49 PM ^

Nice choice.

I like my house, because I have a bit of isolation, but am still in West Michigan.

To the west I have over 3 square miles of interconnected parks, a couple miles of Lake Michigan shoreline through the woods, and the closest house in that direction is ~80 miles away in Wisconsin.  To the east I the closest house is over a mile away and across a ~320 acre lake with a nature preserve directly across from me so I see trees.  To the north and south I have a house fairly close to me though.

So I get some isolation, but I am still close driving distance to Muskegon and Grand Haven.

daveheal

April 9th, 2018 at 5:25 PM ^

Yeah, I love that city with all my heart but 4 months out of the year it'd be a tough go. Also if you have any self-control issues that city is a real problem. Would love to have a house there but think my body would revolt at living there full time, in part b/c of what I would put it through. 

Squad16

April 9th, 2018 at 3:36 PM ^

Southern California and Ann Arbor are my top 2 and there aren't any super close 3rds. 

In a perfect world, I'd be in Ann Arbor mid-May to November and in Los Angeles December to mid-May.

 

Next in line would probably be any number of places out west with easy access to nature, probably Colorado or Northern Arizona (Sedona/Flagstaff).

Hawaii is obviously fantastic, but I would never live there. Something just so claustrophobic about living there long term. 

 

snarling wolverine

April 9th, 2018 at 4:24 PM ^

Hawaii seems like it would be fantastic when you're there as a tourist.  Then you move there and realize that you're making less money than you did on the mainland while your expenses are way up, that you're totally isolated from your friends/family, and that it's hard to make new friends as people assume you're just there for the short term (and/or have an ax to grind against mainlanders)...

 

njvictor

April 9th, 2018 at 3:34 PM ^

Portland: A super chill, livable city with awesome food and lots of nature. Only issue is homeless people

San Fransisco: Awesome culture, cool city, great food, also very expensive so the all expenses paid thing would be nice

Boston: Smallish city with a colonial flare and cool personality, only downside is the winter

PaulWall

April 9th, 2018 at 3:36 PM ^

anywhere that has a good beer league hockey system in place. Ive relocated quite a bit, and each time I always check out the adult hockey leagues around town.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

April 9th, 2018 at 3:35 PM ^

I have way too strong a pull toward my hometown to choose anywhere but there.

I used to live in Newport, RI.  I'd probably go back there if forced to leave where I am.  It has to be somewhere where I can race boats, but southern climates are too warm.  Newport's a little bit regulated by the ocean, which is nice.

Leatherstocking Blue

April 9th, 2018 at 4:14 PM ^

I lived in Newport in the mid '70's as a kid and we go back several times a year (luckily we are only a 4.5 hour drive). Winters are not half bad, I raced a Laser in the frostbite fleet a few years ago - 46 boats on a Sunday afternoon in December with some of the best in the world sailing regularly. Typical temperature in winter is 45 degrees and, like you said, comfortable in the summer, especially when the sea breeze kicks in just before 1 pm.

There is a FB group called, If you grew up in Newport, RI, that is worth joining. A lot of old photos and great memories.

TraumaRN

April 9th, 2018 at 3:38 PM ^

Realistically: Chattanooga Tennessee Fairly progressive southern town on the rise, surrounded by mountains and the Tennessee River cuts through town. Cost of living is cheap, weather is pretty reasonable. 2 hours to Nashville, 1.5 hours to Atlanta. Still a day's drive back to Michigan if I wanna catch a football game. 

 

Fantasy land? Western Australia or French Polynesia. French Polynesia for the rugged, raw beauty of the islands, mountains coral reefs and lagoons. Western Australia same thing, just add desert, subtract lagoons. 

corundum

April 9th, 2018 at 3:40 PM ^

I'd love to go anywhere back in the Midwest. My company moved me to the desert and even though I love my job, living here absolutely blows. Get me back to four seasons and a lower cost of living. I'll probably get moved to Houston next, which isn't so bad considering the airport is legit.

J.

April 9th, 2018 at 3:45 PM ^

There are few good things about living in Houston.  I mean, if the airport is your major attraction... :)   (PS:  You'll quickly learn to hate United's fares from IAH).

Houston is basically swampland.  The summers are awful.  It's extremely humid.

If you move there, buy flood insurance, even if it's not required by law.

corundum

April 9th, 2018 at 3:50 PM ^

I mean, I'm down to smash all sorts of cajun food. I'll most likely rent a condo since I'll have to be immediately downtown, it's just me and the wife, and my company typically does 2-3 year assignments before rotating to something else.

J.

April 9th, 2018 at 4:07 PM ^

Make sure your renters' insurance covers floods, then.  A lot of the discussions post-Harvey were full of obvious-in-hindsight discussions about the way water is routed during floods -- basically, there's so much concrete in Houston that water rises more rapidly than the models had forecast, and a lot of that gets channeled through downtown.

I'm not sure about Houston as a Cajun food destination.  Tex-Mex, sure.  Barbecue -- OK, but the best is in the Hill Country.  For Cajun, I'd expect to head to New Orleans, or at least Baton Rouge.  (It's possible I've just missed out on some good places).

corundum

April 9th, 2018 at 4:46 PM ^

I actually started my career in the meteorology field and am currently employed in the earth sciences, so I'm well aware of Houston's flooding issues. Houston has an enormous cajun presence as crawfish and catfish eateries are all over the place. I actually think there is better Tex-Mex on my side of the state, though. I see you are in Austin, I just spent a few days there for the F4/championship game and make my way there quite often. Rosita's on Riverside has some great al pastor tacos and Bufalina might be one of my favorite pizza places of all time. Very jealous of the Austin food scene.