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Best Places to Live Work Commute
Been thinking about leaving the County Metro. To many people.
Quite, affordable. I guess Shangri La is not to be found. |
Originally Posted by StarBiker
(Post 19053602)
Been thinking about leaving the County Metro. To many people.
Quite, affordable. I guess Shangri La is not to be found. Perhaps you would prefer something more like this? http://www.gaadi.com/cycles/news/wp-...5/02/China.jpg |
Most people don't choose the place where they live based on commuting options. It's certainly a consideration, but things like jobs, family, weather, housing costs, schools, crime and recreation are usually more important.
Commuting is more of a "cross that one off the list" thing. Like taking an hour to drive 10 miles around the DC metro during rush hour, or taking 90 minutes to get to work in New York city. |
Originally Posted by StarBiker
(Post 19053602)
Been thinking about leaving the County Metro. To many people.
Quite, affordable. I guess Shangri La is not to be found. |
Originally Posted by Carson Dyle
(Post 19053662)
Most people don't choose the place where they live based on commuting options.
we used to live downtown because my job was in the northern burbs and my wife's job was deep on the south side. downtown split that difference for us, so that neither of our commutes were obscenely far. but when my wife left her old job for a new work from home job, i lobbied heavily for us to move to the far northside of the city, in part so that i could reduce my 15 mile one-way commute. it certainly wasn't the only consideration that prompted the move (we were about to have our 1st child and wanted a bigger apartment), but it played a significant role in choosing the specific location (along with the fact that my parents lived nearby, which has been HUGE for helping out with the babies). |
I'm not happy that it takes me 65 or 70 minutes each way, but I'm happy that I have two nice modes of commuting, and neither is with a car. I can ride my bike along the Hudson River Greenway, which has gorgeous views and is low-stress, since it is motor-free. Or I can take the subway and get a chance to do lots of reading.
The commute options were actually a factor in our decision to move from suburban New Jersey back into New York City. The City is actually a good, though far from perfect, place to ride a bike. |
Not too bad, where I live and work here in New York City. Feels like there's a billion people;
but it adds to the character of the city. Lots of places to go to; lots of things one can do. But if I were to relocate to any place I choose; I'd move to the Netherlands. Both winters and summers are milder. Plus biking there is heaven. :) |
CPH , AMS are often praised.
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OP, where is home?
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Originally Posted by 1nterceptor
(Post 19055388)
But if I were to relocate to any place I choose; I'd move to the Netherlands.
Both winters and summers are milder. Plus biking there is heaven. :) http://hum300.tolearn.net/wp-content.../fietspad3.jpg |
I do want to visit the Netherlands and cycle there. I'm sure I'll enjoy it. But that picture makes it look like hell.
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Originally Posted by Leebo
(Post 19055592)
OP, where is home?
I am like the only white guy on a bike I ever see. Very few cyclists. York RD, Padonia RD, Joppa RD are crap. I can often get around slighter faster on a bike, than in a car in my immediate area. You can walk to anything around here. Including mass transit. The place is so ridiculous, "There is the guy that rides the bike". I have been in this area my entire life, and parts of it are really nice, but as per the DC, Boston 95 Corridor it's crowded, expensive, and the weather sucks! At least for me the heat is the big issue. I despise summer! And I would not trust taking any quality bike in the city. My Father loves the area. And he has been everywhere. Including 5 of the 7 continents. He is not a cyclist. See he can afford it. Funny, it probably is one of the better places to live in the US. Cost, and Climate are the problem with me. Anyway I was curious about the responses that's why I was vague. |
I just got lucky. Colorado Springs is beautiful and the portion I commute through is low traffic.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...5TfAHK4EOymjDg |
A downtown area where you live and work nearby and there are plenty of shops, eateries, entertainment and food markets close by. Any college town, many large cities I'd reckon (though you don't want to leave this mysterious 'county metro' area). Beacon, NY if you can deal with being pretty limited without a car and able to work not far from main street. Hudson, NY has a bit of an urban artist up and coming gentrification going on so I hear. Rochester is randomly on my list. Has a bit of an urban center and I hear the surrounding area is decent biking.
Friend just went to Dallas and somewhere else there, said it was nice. City but not too crowded. Stuff may be a bit spread out in Texas though. Plenty other cities... Demoines and Cleveland for some oddball ones. |
Originally Posted by TheLibrarian
(Post 19056033)
A downtown area where you live and work nearby and there are plenty of shops, eateries, entertainment and food markets close by. Any college town, many large cities I'd reckon (though you don't want to leave this mysterious 'county metro' area). Beacon, NY if you can deal with being pretty limited without a car and able to work not far from main street. Hudson, NY has a bit of an urban artist up and coming gentrification going on so I hear. Rochester is randomly on my list. Has a bit of an urban center and I hear the surrounding area is decent biking.
Friend just went to Dallas and somewhere else there, said it was nice. City but not too crowded. Stuff may be a bit spread out in Texas though. Plenty other cities... Demoines and Cleveland for some oddball ones. Some of these responses are very obvious. Although Austin is the place in Texas I could never see myself there. And the heat, the hell with that. Cleveland to much snow. The place that has the most appeal but it's to expensive is either Northern California, or somewhere in the Pacific North West. My longtime neighbor moved to Whidbey Island two years ago. Her longtime boyfriend has a house there. He is ex Navy, and there is a big base there. My Father use to go to Seattle for business frequently. I think most people would never give up a great location they know about. That would ruin it. |
Try the PNW if you don't like summer. Portland, Seattle, Vancouver. Get used to the rain, though.
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Originally Posted by alan s
(Post 19056122)
Try the PNW if you don't like summer. Portland, Seattle, Vancouver. Get used to the rain, though.
Now just find a job and an place to live that allows money for food and you're golden. Edit: Location changed from Vancouver. I couldn't find a job or housing to meet a sustainable ratio. |
Colorado. /thread.
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I like where I live and work. Commute along roads some with bike lanes some don't.. pretty good weather sometimes on the hot and humid side. now if I could just find a job that would help my cycling addiction or at least let me tour more.
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Originally Posted by StarBiker
(Post 19056052)
Nothing mysterious. I posted my location over 10 minutes ago. I don't see what that has to do with my question.
Some of these responses are very obvious. Although Austin is the place in Texas I could never see myself there. And the heat, the hell with that. Cleveland to much snow. The place that has the most appeal but it's to expensive is either Northern California, or somewhere in the Pacific North West. My longtime neighbor moved to Whidbey Island two years ago. Her longtime boyfriend has a house there. He is ex Navy, and there is a big base there. My Father use to go to Seattle for business frequently. I think most people would never give up a great location they know about. That would ruin it. |
Originally Posted by caloso
(Post 19057869)
the rain and tule fog can be oppressive in winter.
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Originally Posted by alan s
(Post 19055927)
Amsterdam is my idea of bike heaven.
http://hum300.tolearn.net/wp-content.../fietspad3.jpg |
Best Places to Live Work Commute
I previously compiled my list of arguments for Boston in this thread, "What is it like where you are?"
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 18467607)
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 18019027)
Does a near-perfect weather place exist?
Personally the only weather I don’t like to ride in is rain, and no rain would be a desert. That said, I really like riding in all seasons, even winter. So my near perfect weather would present the best of all seasons, without the extremes, and I already live here. Nice, albeit short Spring with beautiful blossoms and that first few weeks of relief from Winter; glorious summer; cool crispy Autumn with colorful foliage; and even a bracing, and challenging Winter, but not one impossible to ride in.
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 17496135)
Describe Your Commute
Kenmore Square, Boston to Norwood over 30 years Route: Reverse commute from downtown on four different routes of a minimal distance of 14 miles, each defined by a different hill; can expand to about 30 miles to train Environment: In order of hill difficulty: Gritty (but safe) urban, pleasant suburban, pleasant urban, ritzy suburban Hills: One moderate hill on each route, then smaller hills; estimate only about 1-2 miles flat Road conditions / surfaces: All paved blacktop roads, many, but usually avoidable potholes and cracks; better in summer; shoulders and bike lanes usually available on the major thouroghfares; pleasant residential streets. A pretty well connected, scenic and utilitarian system of bikepaths is available. Traffic: Heavy urban traffic on major routes during usual travel times, but I ride the reverse commuter direction, mostly very early in AM… Alternative Transportation: subway, train, car, bus, taxis, car rentals, Zipcar, place to stay comfortably overnight [at work].
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 17496135)
… Humbly, if Bike Forums ever had a Best Commute Award, I would be a frontrunner...
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 17363887)
… through one of America’s most charming, interesting, and historic metropolises on residential and light commercial roads (and partially on a bikepath in a park)…during all four (pleasant to tolerable) seasons…
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Hard to beat where I live and work...and, yes, I picked both for cycling and commuting.
http://www.bikingbis.com/wordpress/w...lleyTrails.jpg I live about 9 miles North of the junction on the red trail, and I work at the junction of the yellow trail. My morning commute is to hop-skip via country road on over to the little green to blue to brown trail which runs Southwest into town. I head back in the afternoon on the brown to green trail running Southeast, and then, just before the junction, I hop over to the red trail which I ride North to the house. |
60% bike path, 20% quiet roads and 20% going through villages with some 30kmh zones. I love my commute. Easy, safe, flat and on good weather days I get a breathtaking view of the Alps.
http://www.strava.com/activities/717860442 Now when I feel like I need to go into the mountains for some hiking or biking, I can take the car or simply ride my bike there. http://www.strava.com/activities/533721595 |
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