Did you really just scroll down to look at comments? That's just...inadvisable. Well except for this pinned comment, which reminds you that you can sign up for the amazing creator-owned streaming service, Nebula, using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: go.nebula.tv/citynerd
@CityNerd Жыл бұрын
While I've got you here -- Madison is too big. U of Wisc is also big but the enrollment is less than 20% of the city's population, and the other thing that happens there is the relative size of the city makes the non-driving mode share somewhat lower than the cities that actually made this list (i.e., the influence of the university itself is less than it is for cities where university enrollment is 25%+ of the city's population). Another thing: I limited this to NCAA Division 1 schools -- basically the 300-odd schools that are eligible for March Madness -- so I missed your 800-enrollment liberal arts college in a town of 3,000. Sorry about that.
@PolkCountyWIProgressive Жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd I don’t know how you can make an exception for Davis which is 20 minutes from downtown Sacramento and is by nearly every measure in Sacramento’s MSA because of “farmland” but not make an exception for Madison. Sacramento’s MSA is larger than Madison’s.
@CapitulationTrader Жыл бұрын
You are funny as heck. Keep it up. @@CityNerd
@jackcarver1629 Жыл бұрын
Madison is kinda THE college town and this is coming from an Iowa fan who is sad neither Ames or Iowa City made the official list
@kencrews5536 Жыл бұрын
I was toying with the idea of joining Nebula because of you and Maggie Mae Fish but I had no idea Lindsay Ellis was there too. So I guess I'm joining now. Congrats, your sale pitch worked.😁
@toofbrown6335 Жыл бұрын
What ruined Oxford, Mississippi in your data is ironically the thiing you suggest people might do: move there. Oxford has become such an attraction for retirees that it consists of so many car dependent developments that it overwhelms the campus and original town square. The pre-1980s part of town is nicely walkable. Oh and they got rid of Colonel Reb about 13 years ago.
@Peter-sv4mk Жыл бұрын
2:50 San Luis Obispo, CA 3:44 Corvallis, OR 4:37 Charlottesville, VA 5:17 Ann Arbor, MI 5:55 Boulder, CO 7:03 Amherst, MA 7:52 Davis, CA 9:27 Honorable Mentions 10:26 Dishonorable mention 10:56 Burlington, VT 11:35 Ithaca, NY 12:07 State College, PA
@kevinshah6982 Жыл бұрын
goat
@andrewarce8624 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Bo Ring
@andrewarce8624 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Weirdo!
@ericdailey8587 Жыл бұрын
I went to school at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Cornell University. I would take Urbana-Champaign over Ithaca any day.
@Marco-xu1ss11 ай бұрын
Logan, UT Check it out.
@mikemcgrew8163 Жыл бұрын
I recall driving my car to State College as a sophomore in January and parking it in a snow-covered lot. I didn't use it for two months because I walked everywhere or used the surprisingly comprehensive bus service CATA to go to the slopes, parties, grocery shopping, whatever. When I returned to my car I found I had been parked in a fire lane and had a pile of tickets. Oops.
@MbisonBalrog Жыл бұрын
State College PA? If you go shopping you need a car unless you want lug groceries, and stuff everywhere.
@PalmelaHanderson Жыл бұрын
@@MbisonBalrog When you live within walking/biking distance of a grocery store you don't "lug" stuff around. My typical grocery haul is like a 6 pack of beer and whatever I'm eating for dinner that night. I go to the store every other day or so and whatever I buy can easily fit in my bag.
@MbisonBalrog Жыл бұрын
@@PalmelaHanderson but you need a lot of specialty stores around. I live in NYC and still drive to the burbs for the good stuff.
@MbisonBalrog Жыл бұрын
@@PalmelaHanderson also I use to live in State College PA on the list. There are no grocery in the walkable areas. Only a few restaurants and useless shops. Everyone has to drive to Walmart or a big super market to get the good stuff.
@stephentomaszewski8501 Жыл бұрын
@@MbisonBalrogthere are two Mcclanahans. The one on beaver ave is an actually grocery store. You don’t need to go to Walmart but it’s very inconvenient if you don’t. I use to work at that grocery store. The only thing I don’t remember them having was meats. Regardless I drove once a week to Walmart for groceries.
@rrrooorrr Жыл бұрын
Having lived in 3 of the cities listed, I was shocked to see my favorite college city not listed, Madison! I'm not sure if it failed some of the early qualifications, but talk about a unique city, situated on the isthmus between two large lakes. There are bike paths everywhere and great walkability. Amazing restaurant scene, sense of identity, access to parks and wooded areas. In general I found that people who move there for school or work tend to stay there. I might be slightly biased though after living here and listening to the experiences of city planner plays(city planner in Madison). Regardless great video!
@danielkelly2210 Жыл бұрын
Madison did not meet his criteria of having 25% or more of the population be students.
@AaronSmith-sx4ez Жыл бұрын
The problem in general with college towns is housing. Anything within walking distance of the campus, will either be likely rundown, crowded, and noisy...or if nice it will be extremely expensive. Sure you can live further away from campus, but in most cases you then leave the more interesting parts of town and enter generic suburbs. Almost every single city on this top ten list has serious problems with housing/affordability.
@TheJhtlag Жыл бұрын
College towns are an interesting beast, basically a lot of money being thrown at a small town so education, income etc. are greatly multiplied. The irony being that a lot of these places were put there originally for cheap land etc. Things might have been fine at first, but colleges tend to grow and bring in more money and subsequent spawl.
@ednorton47 Жыл бұрын
These towns will collapse when the student loan and grant programs come to an end.
@AaronSmith-sx4ez Жыл бұрын
@@ednorton47 That could be true. In many ways they represent "fake" economies...many college towns though are still nice.
@tomfields36829 ай бұрын
@@ednorton47Not these! All butt a few have thrived for over a century!
@Geswert72 Жыл бұрын
I love how everyone agrees college is the best time of their lives and college towns are great, but we make 0 effort to make the rest of society more like it (walkable, diverse, subsidized food and healthcare, plenty of outdoor common areas) Also LFG both my alma maters on this list
@yungrichnbroke5199 Жыл бұрын
It’s also because you have a lot of free time, a small community with lots of people you have a lot in common, mixed schedules. I live in a walkable neighborhood and I don’t feel any sense of community like I did in college. My neighbors aren’t my coworkers.
@qraptor4738 Жыл бұрын
Oh boy! As a current college student that has been in multiple universities and known many people at them, we all reaaaaally hope that this is not the best times of our lives. Maybe it has something to do with Covid/ post-Covid but almost everyone I know is having an awful, awful time.
@wertbe1718 Жыл бұрын
@@yungrichnbroke5199free time? Hah! I wish!
@Larsoff Жыл бұрын
@@wertbe1718you'll realize after ungrad how much free time you dont have anymore lol its sad but thats the reality
@jonahs4819 Жыл бұрын
@@wertbe1718you might not feel like it at the moment, but as a college student you will almost universally have WAY more “you” time compared to graduate life. I thought I was the busiest little bee in college, and now 4 years after graduating I would literally take a 25% paycut to have that same level of free/me time again. It’s crazy what you don’t notice until it’s gone.
@the_sludge0 Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad Corvallis made it on the list! While the separated infrastructure is not really there, one of the biggest things I've noticed is that drivers actually pay attention to bikes on the road (yielding on a right turn, giving extra space when possible, etc). And newer road work is often reducing lane widths and adding buffered bike lanes, which is always a great thing to see.
@Mogswamp Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately I didn't get to watch the whole video because I blacked out from excitement when you mentioned Amherst. When I regained consciousness you brought up Burlington and I passed out again. Great watch nonetheless, I will send you the medical bill.
@vitaminluke5597 Жыл бұрын
No wonder your superflat world is so well designed.
@bladee47 Жыл бұрын
mogswamp do you live in amherst!?!?
@danielbatmanj349 Жыл бұрын
We need a collab for minecraft urbanism
@Mogswamp Жыл бұрын
@@bladee47 I did for about 6 years! I miss it a lot.
@ronnings417 Жыл бұрын
so wildly shocked to see mogswamp in an urban planning video comment section! heyo
@another_jt Жыл бұрын
The addition of rail connections as a criteria really hurt Midwest college towns in this ranking. You pointed out Iowa City and it's lack of passenger rail, and the same generally holds true for just about every other college-centered town in the center of the country.
@steveszigethy Жыл бұрын
In tribute to Coach Knight (RIP), I just threw a chair due to the omission of Bloomington, Indiana, where I learned the virtues of car-free living as an undergrad.
@DutyDuty Жыл бұрын
One thing I miss about Boulder is that almost all the bike routes are grade separated from car traffic. I remember one exception near Broadway and Baseline, but I've never felt safer biking than in Boulder.
@RobertPrestley Жыл бұрын
Yep, you can really get to most areas in town with the off-street bike paths, which is not something that can be said for most cities. And Boulder is continuing to improve the on-street experience as well, with new protected lanes and intersections!
@aerob1033 Жыл бұрын
@@RobertPrestley With the one glaring exception being North Boulder, which is growing more walkable/urbanist/dense by the year but lacks a good bike connection to downtown or the larger multi-use path network.
@Nex5Network Жыл бұрын
They have put in bollards which reduces Folsom down to one lane in each direction to expand the bike lane
@mgoboski Жыл бұрын
If you need to bike North/South, say along 30th, it can get sketchy.
@nogames8982 Жыл бұрын
Colorado in general has great bike routes. I lived in Fort Collins and I could go all over town and never actually cross the street on my bike. Or if I did it was a very small one. Most of the bike routes went under the major roads. It was wonderful. You can literally go for hundreds of miles on bike paths in Colorado. When I moved away from there, I realized how lucky I had been. Mike, Paul's, in walking paths are built into the infrastructure, every time they add a new subdivision. They connect the bike pass to it. It's a wonderful thing that people that aren't from there don't know the value of.
@dougrouse9989 Жыл бұрын
I’ll try and hold back the tears that Chapel Hill, NC wasn’t mentioned, but great video!
@RogerMillerInVA Жыл бұрын
Actually, my college town, Fort Collins, Colorado (Colorado State) IS like living in Disneyland. The Disney architect who built Main Street USA was a Fort Collins native. He designed Main Street in homage to Fort Collins' charming, all-American Old Town. The resemblances are amazing!
@kelseycochrane3103 Жыл бұрын
i visited there last october and immediately started looking at home prices
@guy6074 Жыл бұрын
I just moved out foco and really miss it
@saga- Жыл бұрын
I’m glad it’s not on the list. No one else needs to move here, hahaha! Go Rams!
@fretfix1 Жыл бұрын
Will always live in the shadow of Boulder. Fort Fun has improved greatly tough...
@chiefflats2949 Жыл бұрын
I love Fort Collins so much. Great bus, bike, and walking routes. Old town is amazing (just did the lighting of Fort Collins on Friday). Wouldn't wanna go to school anywhere else. GO RAMS
@cashmsc Жыл бұрын
It's probably been said before but I absolutely love how you detail your methodology. Really makes your videos feel intentional and truly helpful, and not like some arbitrary thing someone came up with because they felt like it.
@darrianphillips Жыл бұрын
Second this, love it
@CityNerd Жыл бұрын
I don't know how else to do it
@mikemcgrew8163 Жыл бұрын
gut feelin'@@CityNerd
@adamisbetterthanluke Жыл бұрын
You said it in the video,@@CityNerd: vibes (please don't do this)
@michellecorson6025 Жыл бұрын
I am so pleased to see State College, PA as the #1 choice. I was a student at Penn State in the late 1980s-1990s. Fresh from divorce and a very poor mother of two young children, I couldn't afford a car. My little family had to rely on public transport/walking/biking to get around. And it worked! Kids to and from day care, going to classes, shopping, kid activities...the buses were so regular and the routes so well-planned that life was doable without a car.
@timwauman Жыл бұрын
I've lived in State College since 1990 without a car.
@tarico4436 Жыл бұрын
Everything awesome there at Penn State; just watch out for Jerry Sandusky and you'll be fine.
@markr385 Жыл бұрын
Joe knew all along! Who else was called "coach" at PSU? Keep the blue sunglasses and the ice cream, ill live elsewhere thanks.
@tarico4436 Жыл бұрын
@@markr385 Sad for the boys, but instructive for us if we want it to be. Who gets nailed in these situations, and by whom? Low income boys love going to big time football games, get to go for free if they please middle-class coach. People who *happen* to be employed in jobs or affiliated with charity organizations where they will be near the young often are at those places for a reason. Sometimes. I could go on.
@ghy518 Жыл бұрын
That’s amazing. In the future I hope similar stories can be heard from more mothers in other US cities
@jaysullivan2045 Жыл бұрын
I am aware Madison, WI has less than a 25% student population, but it should have been an honorable! What a great small city - Transit mall, bike infrastructure, woven into the city!
@szehui6800 Жыл бұрын
I also had Madison on this list and was surprised to not see it here. Princeton as well...
@randyparker2134 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if Madison can still be called a "small" city. A quarter million people. I agree it's probably the best college town.
@BigE-ty3lq Жыл бұрын
Bloomington, Indiana deserves a nod too!
@c.d.9035 Жыл бұрын
As a Madisonian, I would actually not nominate us. We have some great rails-to-trails paths, but other than that our bike infrastructure seems stuck in the 90s. It's usable for getting from the near east side and near west side to downtown and campus, but worthless for most of the rest of town, with a lot of "bike boulevards" and painted bike lanes (sometimes freakishly scary ones) but almost no separated lanes. Even getting around the campus area involves navigating a disjointed variety of routes, with one of the most useful being unpaved. We have no rail other than freight. The buses are a mess, and only a few routes go outside the city limits, with even that being a recent development. Our BRT is not even here yet, and people, it's 2023. We have problems both with politics and geography. Walker killed interurban rail here even before he took the seat as governor. Mayor Czesliewicz was laughed at for advocating light rail (I remember the word "trolleys" being used derisively, and a lot). I'll be really happy if we ever get an Amtrak station. And lack of traffic enforcement means pedestrians and cyclists keep getting killed and maimed by right and left hooks and speeding vehicles running red and yellow lights. But the central problem is how to create a decent system on an isthmus. The space is severely limited, and a large number of commuters and other motorists are used to being able to funnel their cars through a very narrow system of arterial streets. Other folks have single-family homes on the main through routes; they require parking access to their own property, and often demand on-street parking as well. And no one seems willing to say "no" to these demands, which are understandable but incompatible with rational space use as the city grows. And both for economic and climate reasons, it is likely to grow a lot.
@squireltag1000 Жыл бұрын
A video idea: What are some of the unique problems/solutions used by major cities that sit on state borders (ex. kansas city)
@jspihlman Жыл бұрын
St. Louis, Cincinnati, and DC were a few other cities I thought of for this. You could even argue NY since the greater metropolitan area includes places like Jersey City and Newark.
@jackcarver1629 Жыл бұрын
This is such a good idea and I hope he does a video on it! I think City Beautiful had a video highlighting Portland, Oregon having a problem with trying to limit development on the city edge because the suburbs in Washington State didn't put the same restrictions.
@1978dkelly Жыл бұрын
Nice list! To everyone whining these are all in "cold states" or in California, well, that's who walks, bikes, and builds pedestrian-centric infrastructure.
@Antinchan Жыл бұрын
I have a home in downtown Ann Arbor and lived previously in Madison for 5 years. Having lived in both I was incredulously surprised that Madison wasn't event mentioned. That place is soo pleasant compared to anyplace else.
@zoilalulu3798 Жыл бұрын
You must be a millionaire to be owning a home in downtown Ann Arbor. It's crazy expensive there. Maybe you bought it twenty plus years ago?
@davidgibson9405 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised also...Madison is routinely listed as one of the best biking cities in the USA.
@tomrichardson5433 Жыл бұрын
I would guess that percentage of student population was not high enough for this list
@dylanhill9202 Жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure we don't hit the student percentage threshold - between the state government and a good number of private companies headquartered here, a lot of people that live in Madison aren't affiliated with the university The only other thing I can think of is the lack of urban rail. The Amtrak goes through Columbus and Portage, and good luck getting to either of those cities. I always used coach busses instead when I was a student, they're a pretty good alternative and service Madison well
@davidrichards3921 Жыл бұрын
I think that because Madison is a state capitol that pretty much disqualifies it, same as Austin.
@cooldudepatv9346 Жыл бұрын
Calling West Lafayette a suburb of a major metro is absolutely wild. Lafayette itself has a population of like 60k with cornfields all around and both towns pretty much blend into one another forming what is effectively one larger town. Much the same could be argued with East Lansing. Also, would have loved to see Princeton, NJ mentioned on this list.
@CrytteraXD Жыл бұрын
PSU alum here, I loved living in State College when I was going to get my undergrad. It’s been hard to replicate the same living experience in other places I’ve lived in since then.
@phenomenonautumn9367 Жыл бұрын
"Americans only love the college experience because it's the only time in their lives they live in walkable communities." - A very viral tweet that got half a million likes on Twitter.
@aneraxxmusic2343 Жыл бұрын
It's part of the reason but definetly not all of it
@xtlm Жыл бұрын
lol that may be one of the reasons Americans like college...but it's not in the top 5 reasons for the vast majority of people. Being around so many the same age, the parting, schooling. The first time of freedom not being around parents........ Those things are way way way above
@hudsonja Жыл бұрын
@xtlm curious your age, I'm 36 and walkability is much higher in my list now than some or most of the others, but I also also went to an urban university and commuted, so I only got the walkable part when I was on campus for the day. I miss walking places I actually wanted to go between classes more than the partying and the actual classes.
@xtlm Жыл бұрын
@@hudsonja Same age. I went to the #1 on this list. I very much enjoyed being able to walk everywhere. It was neat that the town and school were right there for 2 of the 3 places I lived. The third place you had to walk up a large hill and was further away. I also commuted to one of their satellite campuses, which was an extra hilly place where you had to park at the bottom of a large and kinda steep hill (then when you reached the top you had to go up steps) and I can't really say I enjoyed that too much outside of the exercise lol. But I would say that the other things I stated were way more important to most students there, at the time at least. It's an extremely party centric college (and the walk-able-ness of it helps that tremendously. If kids realized that at the time IDK). I am an oddball who likes exploring, so the walking was fun for me. It was something like 5 miles a day at the min so it kept you in shape. Though, I DO really like driving. I think it's an fun/cool thing we are allowed to do. Part of me can't believe that we are allowed to pilot around these large machines everywhere so willy nilly. It's so cool. The exploration is kinda endless. Though I miss the walking a lot, I really don't know if I would want to live in a dense environment like that full time. It's beyond great for college though.
@spiffinn_music_lists Жыл бұрын
As an Ithacan, I would say its main limitations stem from how small it is as a city. Thinking more generally about college towns, an important factor to consider is that some universities (looking at you Cornell) don't pay hardly enough taxes. I know cost of living wasn't part of this list, but Ithaca is in the top 10 most expensive places to live according to some studies, coming above some of the Californian cities we like to make fun of. We have a housing crisis in Ithaca, yet most developments are still targeted at well-off Cornellians. All that said, it's a really nice place if you can make it work.
@amielleano946 Жыл бұрын
I went to undergrad in Davis and I'm not surprised to see it here at all! It's what got me into biking and found it to be a pleasant place to live in. The student-run transit system is also pretty sweet with their double-decker buses. I just wish local NIMBYs would allow the city to densify.
@DevinDillenger Жыл бұрын
Go Aggies!
@beverlywilcox4349 Жыл бұрын
We are, we are. Big apartment/affordable housing complex going up at 5th and G where Hibberts Lumber used to be.
@Buckseed Жыл бұрын
Go, Ags! Beckett Hall 1st Floor 1985
@sentrygl Жыл бұрын
When i went to college at Penn State, i remember using the stars college bus service even for hiking. Id take one bus to Pine Grove Mills, hike up Tussey Mountain, and hike along the mountain for 10 miles before catching another bus at the ski area. Living there got me into hiking for the 1st time
@soastersoas5827 Жыл бұрын
I disagree that college towns are great. They're amazing while you're a student, but there's very few opportunities to work and live in them once you graduate. Plus, they're dead when students aren't there, which makes it hard for businesses to survive. Especially when it comes to grocery stores. My town is a college town and I live on main street, and the nearest one is 30 mins away. The mayor recognizes this problem but the school basically holds the town hostage by continually accepting new students, which means more housing is turned into student only housing, which makes it even harder to build anything for students once they graduate
@martincamsey3524 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you are moving somewhere else?
@guttercherry65076 ай бұрын
This is spot on. And definitely true of State College! OMG the arguments between the town and the university. There was a street on the campus border that the school said was the towns, and the town said the school was responsible for it. That thing had potholes in it the size of swimming pools for decades! So much drama. As a high school student living there - there was virtually nothing to do. But we did bike a lot.
@DJTI99 Жыл бұрын
New Haven, ignored again. Trains to NYC, Boston, and Springfield. Bike lanes galore. Bike trail to Hartford. Buses all over the city. I live on the outskirts, and getting to just about everything I need is either a short walk, or a bus ride away. And that is not even mentioning the world's best pizza. People take the train from NYC to have pizza in New Haven. I know people who have taken the Amtrak from DC to have New Haven pizza.
@BeltwayLandLion Жыл бұрын
State College turned me into an urbanist. I loved walking everywhere -- I didn't even bother to have a bike, walking was just so practical.
@Qay Жыл бұрын
Growing up, I used to wish I could bike to school. But walking was just so practical, dealing with a bike would've been more of a hassle! This was in suburban Stockholm. Having experienced that, it always confuses me why so many American parents think driving their kids everywhere until they're 16 is ideal.
@bubbagump9662 Жыл бұрын
Same I had a motorcycle that I used from time to time when in a hurry but I walked 95% of the time when going anywhere on campus
@gordon2766 Жыл бұрын
Hoboken isn’t so dense, it’s just that nearly all the space is dedicated to residential. All the office space is in Manhattan or Jersey City.
@tomfields36829 ай бұрын
Reread your first two sentences. What do you think the definition of density is?
@Nex5Network Жыл бұрын
'Sko Buffs! Happy to see Boulder featured on this channel. Can't wait to see your video all about us! :) First I want to note that the Cheesecake Factory closed 10 years ago, and the top and bottom floors of the building have been converted to an Avanti food hall. Very pleased you covered that 50% of the working population of the city commutes in every day, and that the train won't arrive until I retire. The bike paths and bike culture here are great, as a middle schooler I had the run of the city on my bike, happy times. With good paths and sunshine most days, there's good potential for e bike commuting.
@deloreandorian Жыл бұрын
Genuinely a bit surprised Champaign-Urbana didn't make the cut, I hope it was near the top ten at least! Got my undergrad in planning here and sticking around for an extra year to get a masters and i feel like i hit the jackpot for college-town urbanism, a perfect case study city that i get to learn in.
@jakobpopaeko6435 Жыл бұрын
UIUC gang rise up (and my guess would be that it’s because downtown champaign/urbana are relatively disconnected from campustown)
@mattnaka6437 Жыл бұрын
@@jakobpopaeko6435This guys probably never been here but that is the wrong assumption to make. The heart of downtown champaign is like 0.25 miles at most away from the edge of campustown and it only feels farther because they are separated by regional rail. Urbana on the other hand, is legitimately separated by around 0.75 miles of single family houses, but urbana isn’t as big and the “downtown” is really only 20ish business now that the mall is dead. 20 years ago I think it felt more like a twin cities vibe but now it is really just campustown acting as the urban core and suburbs around that.
@findmeinthefuture. Жыл бұрын
Considering it was 2nd place in his "Small City Urbanism" video (despite that ranking deliberately penalizing college towns), it can't have been far off. I would be interested to know where it would land on this one, and how much its ranking was affected by population and housing prices (which the small city urbanism video considered while this one didn't).
@lukeb.5625 Жыл бұрын
bloomington normal is better
@kgbinfo Жыл бұрын
@@lukeb.5625I think Bloomington Normal has way too many stroads to be considered “urbanist”. Like I can’t imagine living there without a car.
@davidsousaRJ Жыл бұрын
I'm living in State College since the beginning of 2023 and I find it a great place to live. I don't have a car, and still I can go anywhere walking, biking or taking the bus. There are buses to Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and New York. One the things I love the most here is the nature, we are surrounded by the Appalachian mountains and thick forests. It's paradise for hiking lovers like me.
@scottfrazer4669 Жыл бұрын
Came here hoping to see Amherst, MA and I was not disappointed! Leaving my car-dependent suburb and going to UMass Amherst was extremely eye opening for me. I literally remember the very first day on campus and we WALKED into town to get bagels. I was blown away that something like that was even possible (yes, car-dependent suburbia was all I knew). It was the first seed of urbanism that got planted in my head
@Mogswamp Жыл бұрын
Bruegger's or The Works tho? 👀👀
@scottfrazer4669 Жыл бұрын
@@Mogswamp Breugger's! Is it still there? I haven't been back in close to a decade
@Mogswamp Жыл бұрын
@@scottfrazer4669 you bet! Although much of the surroundings are VERY different. Bunch of midrise apartments went up where the carriage shops used to be. Bit of a shame, really changed the feel of downtown. They're also marketed as luxury apartments and super overpriced. They serve mostly international students whose parents have deep pockets.
@autribasu Жыл бұрын
You walked from UMass to town? PVTA all the way.
@jpg3702 Жыл бұрын
I think it is for quite a lot of people who go to college (if their college is in a walkable town)!
@davelavigne2133 Жыл бұрын
Ha! Cheese Cake factory in Boulder closed several years ago. We always joked that “it’s where students take their Midwest parents.” No chains survive in Boulder.
@cdmoomaw Жыл бұрын
I never thought I’d see the day when Auburn is used as the poster child for “good football team” or “party school”, much less both.
@mmmben Жыл бұрын
I'm new faculty at Penn State. Could afford a house a mile from my job. I walk and bike everywhere, and life kicks ass
@vik4286 Жыл бұрын
I just moved to Ithaca to work for the city's planning department! Incredibly walkable and good urbanism overall.
@malikshabazz2065 Жыл бұрын
Awesome!
@barryrobbins7694 Жыл бұрын
Sure, go help the smart kids!😀
@maryland7586 Жыл бұрын
Planning student at Cornell, would love to see u around!
@BrakeCoach Жыл бұрын
Freshman here as well 🤚
@charlienyc1 Жыл бұрын
Is no one going to mention Ithaca's infamous catch phrase? I once saw a dude on the UC Davis campus wearing an Ithaca t-shirt with said phrase.
@michaelkearney7923 Жыл бұрын
Sadly (not sadly) the Boulder Cheesecake Factory has gone out of business. It’s been replaced by a multi floor restaurant with four different food style options and rooftop dining with views of the flatirons.
@dylanktravis Жыл бұрын
Came here to say this!
@StevenAllen-z6b Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Ann Arbor and graduated class of 2000. In the 90s it was an amazing place to grow up. The city has evolved from educating everyone being the core community value to the education economy serving the upperclass being the core community value. The difference is in the 90's you could be middle class and thrive in Ann Arbor and today the Ann Arbor middle class is an afterthought. Profits from educating teenagers and young adults from upper class out of state communities trumps the actual education of Ann Arbor residents.
@ktburger659 Жыл бұрын
Yep, so many people getting priced out of living in A2 too
@CourtneyW618 Жыл бұрын
Big fan of your channel AND alum of The University of Mississippi here. Our mascot isn’t Colonel Reb he’s a racist relic based on a Black man actually. And while that’s problematic we are the Landsharks. Our slogan is Fins Up. Just to clarify.
@CourtneyW618 Жыл бұрын
I’m also a former employee as well so I get how confusing the messaging can be coming out of the university.
@kevinmcgrath5126 Жыл бұрын
As a UMass alum, one thing that was missed in the video was how good the PVTA (BRT) and bike infrastructure are. There's a off-street bike path between Amherst and Northampton (home of Smith College) and neighboring Easthampton. Tons of bike lanes in each town as well.
@Mogswamp Жыл бұрын
100%. I rode my bike everywhere, and if there wasn't a good path you could just throw your bike on the front of a bus and hop on for a few stops until the trails picked up again
@micosstar Жыл бұрын
@@Mogswampnice minecraft channel! glad you enjoy ray’s (citynerd’s) stuff!
@_JamesManning Жыл бұрын
Loved the Norwottuck Rail Trail when I was a graduate student there. 👍🏻
@CityNerd Жыл бұрын
Dang, would've been cool to cover that. I'm always struggling with how much time to spend on each city, it can get unwieldy!
@altemzwo8390 Жыл бұрын
@@CityNerd The nice thing about your videos is that you can just look into the comment section to find out more about the stuff you cover :)
@SuperShellsta Жыл бұрын
Follow up video: top 10 most sprawling universities of the South
@Broseidon77 Жыл бұрын
The Cheesecake Factory in Boulder is actually a cafeteria type eatery now. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.
@TheHaydeenee Жыл бұрын
Amherst connectivity to regional transit is really good because of the norwottuck rail trail! It starts right in the UMass campus and goes straight past the Amtrak station and into the downtown of Northampton. 9 miles of beautiful tree lined bike path.
@slickness8892 Жыл бұрын
I was at UMass from '86-'90 so missed out on this trail. It apparently opened in '93. That would have been awesome. I biked around campus and into Amherst but took the bus when going to Northampton.
@theonlymrsnickj Жыл бұрын
Colonel Reb hasn't been the mascot of the University of Mississippi since 2003...
@andyo44cog Жыл бұрын
Great video! My great great grandma was killed in a horse & buggy accident on pearl street in Boulder ages ago, so I much prefer the current pedestrianized pearl street. I'd love to see a video about urban growth boundaries and greenbelts, and how to do them well
@soullessblacklight Жыл бұрын
UC Davis alumnus represent, glad to see the ranking. Davis is one of the few cities where stealing bikes is the equivalent of a grand theft auto. One more thing about its transit, there is a bus line, although exclusive to UC Davis/UC Berkeley students and faculty and runs like twice a day, between those 2 UC campuses, which then connects up w/ the rest of the bay area transit
@physiqueamateur Жыл бұрын
They have significantly increased the bus coverage, with like 20 bus lines
@melodia92 Жыл бұрын
i don't want to be mean, but that is not how the bus system works here. anyone can use them, it costs a couple dollars, and they normally run every 30-60 min throughout the day. honestly though davis is one of the best and nicest looking cities when it comes to public transit and walkability, and yes i am saying that because i grew up here
@jacobbyers7914 Жыл бұрын
Unitrans is free to students, employees, and faculty but anyone can ride it if you pay a fare
@jacobbyers7914 Жыл бұрын
The frequency of Unitrans could be better for sure. I remember the bus from Greystone apartments (where I lived) was always packed. It wouldn't hurt for service to be extended an hour or two later since there are some clubs on campus that can go pretty late.
@jacobbyers7914 Жыл бұрын
@@melodia92 Downtown Davis is great but could probably stand to have some car-free areas imo
@AaronSmith-sx4ez Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised Madison wasn't mentioned. It's a neat little city...it's on an isthmus and somewhat dense for its size. It has a high percentage of white collar workers and those with higher education degrees. There are many independently owned shops/restaurants with creative cuisine options (independent to franchise restaurant ratio is likely among the highest in the country). Very wooded, tons of parks, nice lakes, terrific rails-to-trails bike paths, and there are future plans to connect to to Milwaukee/Chicago via the Hiawatha with perhaps a train stop by the campus. It's also a planned city with a somewhat unique (for Wisconsin) radial layout around the capitol.
@kimck10 Жыл бұрын
Agree very much, but I had to go look it up and the population is too high vs the college enrollment. Such a great little city. Rates high for young professionals too.
@AaronSmith-sx4ez Жыл бұрын
@@kimck10 UW-Madison has an enrollment of 49k. Madison itself has a population of 269k. That a ratio of 1-5...and pretty high.
@kevinzaragoza9317 Жыл бұрын
@@kimck10yeah but it's in Indiana...
@radishpineapple74 Жыл бұрын
Housing is rising at among the fastest in the country. I am being forced to move at the end of my current term for "renovations" so that the landlord will increase rent by approximately 25%. That could also be a reason.
@StarJDog Жыл бұрын
I biked passed a "Madison, WI Population: XX" sign and it's as high as 282,000 people now! I think we have graduated into "not just a college town" and you can tell in the summers when Downtown doesn't just die. We also have the third highest bike % for cities over 250k so we probably would have placed well
@rossedwardmiller Жыл бұрын
Shout out to Morgantown WV. Any distance is walkable when you’re blitzed on penny pitchers of natural light
@IcebergSlim1978 Жыл бұрын
Loved seeing the street view of the Chauncey Hill area of West Lafayette, IN at Purdue (my alma mater) at the 0:40 mark. Nice to the see you listed the town as honorable mention. I actually grew up in WL and it was a great place to live. I have lived in several other places over the past 25 years and I have always missed living in a college town.
@Mahoot Жыл бұрын
As a recent Purdue grad I felt a little sense of pride seeing my old college town in his video lol, it also made me feel nostalgic and miss college a little bit haha
@MrAflac9916 Жыл бұрын
I live in Athens, Ohio - it's so great that I decided to stay after graduation. If accounting for cost of living I'm sure it would've been high up on this list.
@allanluis3696Ай бұрын
duuuuude, I was hoping for this mention. I went to Wright State Uni, my brother went to OU, and I LOVE ATHENS. It's a cool lil spot. But yea, most small towns with a large Uni has a great vibe to it. Very different from most of suburbia which is dead and can be creepy.
@barryrobbins7694 Жыл бұрын
8:32 A video about how Davis became so bicycle friendly would be a great example for other towns.
@TheObimaraАй бұрын
Its bicycle friendliness is rather nuanced. See my comment above.
@barryrobbins7694Ай бұрын
@@TheObimara Davis certainly has a way to go to match the Netherlands. It’s also somewhat isolated even though it is close to Sacramento.
@TheObimaraАй бұрын
In a way it's three cycling worlds layered on top of each other: 1) Perhaps 15 to 30% up to 9th grade then going down by half once kids have cars, or can go in the cars of friends to the free parking at high school. 2) A range of about 20 to 40% of all members of the campus community who get to UCD by bike, but really mostly from closer parts of the city, and many have cars which they use when they have free parking at destinations in the city and in the region 3) About 3 to 6% mode share from non-university associated adults for commuting to jobs in town, shopping and social activities and some school runs and combined trips with Amtrak.
@barryrobbins7694Ай бұрын
@@TheObimara Do students really have money for cars, car insurance, gas, etc.? The reality is that most people in Davis can live without a car, especially compared to other places in the country.
@TheObimaraАй бұрын
We're discussing and interpreting statistics here, not looking at potential.... But a lot of student apartment complexes have parking lots completely full of cars, and nearby streets completely full of their cars.... Including on-campus housing. While there are some discounts for long distance bus trips to the Bay Area, Amtrak service is quite limited, doesn't run late (It's useless for Night time events in Sac) and standard pricing is quite high. Car ownership and access is so high in town that there's no car share cars available east of Pole Line/Lillard.
@seanthewonton Жыл бұрын
I might be biased, but I'm surprised Newark, DE (University of Delaware) didn't make the list. There's on Amtrak station on the Northeast Corridor; Washington, DC, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York are all reachable in ~2 hours or less. The central quad runs most of the campus from north-south and intersects Main Street which runs east-west, making it extremely walkable. I toured both UD and Rutgers when looking at colleges and found UD to be infinitely more pedestrian/biking friendly compared to Rutgers.
@joek7080 Жыл бұрын
I loved my time at UC Davis, and I definitely miss the biking. Only problem now is that housing costs have begun to increase because of local restrictions on development. Hope they get that sorted too, especially as the university continues to expand
@zacharyyan4898 Жыл бұрын
The City of Berkeley as a whole isn’t much of a college town other than Southside
@areader2253 Жыл бұрын
I have been to Santa Cruz, Corvallis, Davis and Burlington and I enjoyed them so much. I would love to visit the other 6 on your list as well, but the greatest difficulty is that many beautiful college towns in America lack train connections to large urban centers.
@areader2253 Жыл бұрын
Sorry I meant San Luis Obispo (but I have been to Santa Cruz as well, and I'm surprised it didn't make it on the list)
@Wasabi9111 Жыл бұрын
Do you have any favorites? I need somewhere warm with good medical facilities.
@mastersinmenopause Жыл бұрын
Yes! Exactly! Me too!
@deadendguitarist Жыл бұрын
@@areader2253 I love Santa Cruz, but outside of the area immediately surrounding Pacific Ave, its all pretty low density, and the actual campus is very much not integrated with the rest of town. It definitely has college town vibes, but an urbanist's dream, it is not.
@katherandefy Жыл бұрын
Yes, bring passenger train back to the US!!!
@13ccasto Жыл бұрын
I live in State College and it is great in a lot of ways but I was shocked to see it ranked above all those other awesome towns! It's easy to have critiques of the place you live but honestly my heart skipped a beat when you revealed #1
@billpenna Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the higher up the list he went the more I thought State College might not've made the cut. It was a nice surprise.
@dermottbreault9189 Жыл бұрын
same and then i saw the birds eye shot and i was like "holy crap is that the hub?"
@kylehynes7480 Жыл бұрын
I feel that... I've lived in state college since age 2 and I was expecting us to come in at 5 or 6 or so. but nope. I don't know why but I had the same little stomach-butterfly feeling of hometown pride when he said we were tops
@MarkSentesy Жыл бұрын
I was really surprised at State College getting ranked that high. The downtown is already 20% parking lot, with low occupancy on non-football weekends, and it took public outcry for the city to stop a project to demolish a brewery and a few other downtown buildings and put up a parking garage. Atherton is an un-bikeable scar on the city that kids can't safely cross on their own. After you get out of the downtown and the residential areas immediately around it, it turns into suburbland. I think we should convert two lanes of Atherton, and one lane of Beaver and College into human spaces instead of carland, and replace cars and public car-storage facilities with biking lanes, spaces for cafe and restaurant seating and public hangout space.
@donkensler Жыл бұрын
A cousin of mine graduated from Penn State in 1973 and decided to retire to State College with his wife. SC is on the list of college towns where lots of grads take shit jobs just so they can soak in the college vibe for a while longer. Ann Arbor is another such, as are, I would suppose, most of the other towns on this list.
@mx62455 Жыл бұрын
It was wild seeing Von's and state street near the start of the vid. Purdue in West Lafayette was my first experience of walkable living. I hope they improve Chauncey Hill and eastward, since most of it's car-dependent development and parking lots
@sabinecannon2836 Жыл бұрын
As one such resident who commutes to Boulder for work, I just wanna add that the "Fine Restaurant" on Pearl Street closed down quite some time ago! I never even knew it existed!
@altitudeiseverything3163 Жыл бұрын
I’m so glad that you put “fine restaurant” in quotation marks, LOL. Boulder has been called “the foodiest town in America” by Bon Appétit and has so much better to offer.
@charlienyc1 Жыл бұрын
Elsewhere someone said it closed down 10 years ago!
@wessparkmon2395 Жыл бұрын
Hey cool. Don't do your research on Oxford, MS. The walk score makes sense that its low considering that recent development outside the main core of the city means that sidewalks in particular haven't stretched "into the county" from the downtown Oxford, but it isn't like anyone particularly wants to walk that far in oppressive heat and humidity for like half the year. I made it there easily for two years without a car, and that was before all the improvements of the last 10+ years. It is rated as a "bicycle-friendly town" with new bike lanes being put in whenever streets are paved or repaved. Also, for a city of 25,000, they have a solid bus system with 10 routes throughout the city and 4 other strictly university shuttle routes. All buses are free for all riders too. And, despite the fact you know this because it is prominent on the Wikipedia page you brought up just to dunk on Mississippi, Colonel Reb hasn't been the university's mascot for 20 years at this point. But keep on seeing what you want so you can go off on the south.
@fitzsi28 Жыл бұрын
Moved to State College from Des Plaines (just outside Chicago city limits on a Metra line). I bike everyday to and from daycare, work, and swim lessons. Almost all our weekend activities are accessible by bike. The bike infrastructure isn't fantastic, but there are so many people riding bikes that outside of 6 weekends year, drivers are expecting bikes on the road.
@gerberjoanne266 Жыл бұрын
My mother used to say that the closest thing to heaven was a New England college town. Lucky for her, she got to spend the last years of her life in Hanover, New Hampshire. That's where Dartmouth is. An especially pretty town. What's more, the Upper Connecticut River Valley, where it's located, has tons of pretty towns, so she was not just limited to one place.
@charlienyc1 Жыл бұрын
I went through Dartmouth on a work trip at least 20 years ago. I still remember it being gorgeous! Some small part of that might have been the autumn leaves, but still...
@gerberjoanne266 Жыл бұрын
@@charlienyc1 Trust me, it's gorgeous at other times of the year, as well. The only less-than-beautiful season is spring, as that's mostly characterized by black flies and mud (as is true for a lot of northern climes).
@charlienyc1 Жыл бұрын
@@gerberjoanne266 Sounds like Vermont! I'm from upstate NY, so New England-adjacent 😆
@jorymil Жыл бұрын
I love Hanover, and not too far away are Burlington, Brattleboro, and the various MA college towns. New England is full of good colleges, beautiful fall weather, and nice people. I lived out there on my own for 15 years, and I'd move back if I had more family within a day's drive. It's hard only seeing family once or twice a year, and it's hard to justify the environmental impact of air travel.
@xsexystudmuffinx Жыл бұрын
That's because New England college towns are like 99% white. If your mom considers that heaven, well... I get it
@andyb2040 Жыл бұрын
An absolute crime that Madison, Wisconsin isn't on here.
@fatviscount6562 Жыл бұрын
He explained at the beginning of the video that this video only covers towns where student enrollment account for 25% of the population, which excludes Austin, Madison, Minneapolis, all of which he has already covered well on other videos.
@anthonyfrushour537 Жыл бұрын
@CityPlannerPlays, is this you? 😂
@MrFolton17 Жыл бұрын
He explaijed why it wasn't at the beginning of the vid bruh.
@andyb2040 Жыл бұрын
@@fatviscount6562 Noted! With some quick math, UW-Madison student enrollment is roughly 20% of the city, so slightly under that threshold. I always viewed Ann Arbor as a similar city to Madison but without the lakes/capitol. Both are amazing cities in their own right.
@cameronthaijohnson Жыл бұрын
Well given our crazy housing shortage and skyrocketing rent/housing prices, I think people already know about Madison lol. We've caught up with the Twin Cities (and much more stock on the more affordable end) which is way bigger. Madison is a bit bigger than the true college towns as well. UW has grown a lot from ~40k enrollment to ~50k enrollment since I started as an undergrad 7 years ago, but yeah it does fall below that 25% threshold and the metro area as a whole is pushing 700k and almost twice as big as like the Ann Arbor metro population which has the same massive sized university. Being the state capital, state job center, second major city, and growing Midwest tech, biotech, and healthcare hub also adds up to more of a real city than some of the true smaller college towns.
@thetransbay Жыл бұрын
I remember visiting back to my university town and the issue with living there is once you leave you realize how much of it really _is_ based on the school. Even one year after graduation I remember hearing every conversation on the buses or in the restaurants about the next class, the upcoming test, the professors. And while I was still fresh enough to know all those topics there was very much a disconnect being a proper working adult. Maybe this is fine to some people but for me it killed the remaining ideas I had of living there full time (the cost of living killed most of it in all fairness).
@davidn2612 Жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for talking about Corvallis! I’ve lived here for two years to go to Oregon State. It’s pretty weird how many people bike here with almost no high quality infrustructure except on campus, but I think you’re right about it going to show how much culture and public attitude can do to change the reality of biking
@loganpage1542 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised Eugene didn't also make the list!
@davidn2612 Жыл бұрын
@@loganpage1542 yeah me too… I think Corvallis made it higher because it has small-town advantage. Most places are pretty close to each other so there’s naturally more biking and walking
@bluecomet8416 Жыл бұрын
@@davidn2612true. I’ve been told Eugene is the Oregon equivalent of San Bernardino, CA
@dougwhichard6417 Жыл бұрын
I’m surprised Eugene did not make the Top 10! Curious to know where it fits into the ranking. Keep these great videos coming! Thanks!
@dgbrownnt Жыл бұрын
Eugene is too big of a city to make the list. His definition of "college town" is cities where the enrollment is >25% of the population. U of O has an enrollment of 23k and Eugene has a population of about 180k, which would make it about 13% (or 6% of you include the whole Eugene metro area). It does hurt, though, seeing OSU on the list... 😂
@dougwhichard6417 Жыл бұрын
That makes sense. I didn’t realize Eugene was such a big metro area. I’ve only spent short periods of time there, but it is a great college town with bike and running trails all over the place.
@jinjo2200 Жыл бұрын
Came here to say this, I agree Eugene is a great college town, but I guess it's too big for the video's criteria.
@mitchellgross2568 Жыл бұрын
Eugene is the best!
@thomasnewman83209 ай бұрын
@dgbrownnt Totally bias towards Eugene but you hot a point, haha 😅.
@nlpnt Жыл бұрын
Burlington native here, none of this is a surprise except I'm interested in how Davis, CA embraced bikes as serious transportation in *the '60s* when they were at peak being-considered-children's-toys.
@toughbutsweet1 Жыл бұрын
Hippies?
@nickbates5028 Жыл бұрын
tldr version to my understanding is that a few UC Davis professors who had been to the Netherlands got elected to city council and then tried to emulate some of what they saw there
@TXMEDRGR Жыл бұрын
Oxford, Mississippi is a wonderful little town.
@tristancassel8986 Жыл бұрын
Great video, as always. New Jersey property taxes can hurt, but New Brunswick can put you in Manhattan in like 45 minutes via train, which is pretty awesome.
@johanna7254 Жыл бұрын
I almost accepted a job in the Davis area before realizing my wages would only BARELY cover the cost of renting a tiny studio lol. Oh what could have been.... 😅
@reneeseance5367 Жыл бұрын
I’m from Chico, CA which is definitely a college town- a little progressive oasis amidst a very rural area in Northern California. I lived there since I was 5 and got my bachelors and masters degree at CSU, Chico. I think it was quite good for walkers, bikers, and transit- enough so that I subsisted on biking or bussing everywhere I needed to go and didn’t get my drivers license until after I got my Masters degree and started working outside of Chico. I think it at least deserves an honorable mention.
@ryanmiller9450 Жыл бұрын
Fellow Chico State grad here and totally agree! I grew up in Paradise, and moving to Chico for college was life changing. It was the first place I realized life was possible without owning a car. Definitely honorable mention worthy.
@metromlv Жыл бұрын
Yes, I grew up in Chico and I agree. Part of the urbanist charm is that the campus sits right next to downtown and unlike so many small downtowns, it's still a thriving center of social and economic activity for the community. I think it gets a bad rap as a "party" school, and certain that still seems to be the case, but that is just a small part. Right now I really wish I was finishing class and heading to Celestino's for a slice :D
@nplus1watches35 Жыл бұрын
My school made your list, but I agree with these three other folks in this thread (so far), you should have a least given Chico State an honorable mention. I mean, c'mon, they got Bidwell Park.
@reneeseance5367 Жыл бұрын
@@nplus1watches35 Bidwell Park itself is reason Chico should be featured on this channel. I’m genuinely surprised that this wasn’t the video where I saw Chico finally show up.
@reneeseance5367 Жыл бұрын
@@metromlv this comment resonates so deeply with me. I spent a lot of time in the art department right across the street from Celestino’s so I would go there at least twice a week between classes. That’s about how often I still think about Celestino’s 😂 and that is literally a block away from the transit center
@303Gaming-q3y Жыл бұрын
7:01 As a Boulder resident I can tell you that unfortunately that Cheesecake Factory on the pedestrian mall has closed down… However they replaced it with a fantastic food hall that has a rooftop view of the flatirons!
@kevinessington8220 Жыл бұрын
But is Dot's Diner still in the old garage down the street?
@NateOBrien Жыл бұрын
State College really is the best town in the country. It has everything you need: public transportation, clean, low crime, and most importantly it's affordable.
@medlocrf7289 Жыл бұрын
When I lived there in the early 90's it was a cultural wasteland. For a college town it had the worse music scene imaginable. No food worth mentioning. No diversity. And I can't imagine not having a car because sure you can survive in town but you can never leave as the closest way out would be the Amtrak station 60-90 minutes away by car. If you are happy living in an extremely boring place then I guess it will be Happy Valley for you. To be fair 6 months out of the year there was some outdoor activities available in the surrounding area (as long as you have a car). Full disclosure - city dweller that hasn't owned a car for close to 30 years.
@tarico4436 Жыл бұрын
Well, sorta low crime. Remember Jerry Sandusky? Hmmm?
@ednorton47 Жыл бұрын
@@tarico4436 Be alert when taking a shower.
@tarico4436 Жыл бұрын
@@ednorton47 Yeah, and don't be an eleven year old boy.
@jontveite2508 Жыл бұрын
@@medlocrf7289 Yeah, I agree. I don't live there, but I've worked there for 8+ years, and I am totally unimpressed. The type of culture I look for in a college town is very limited. The music scene is still very limited. With a college population this large, there should be a handful of good music venues serving dozens of local bands. There really isn't even a good place to buy used records and CDs. What college culture exists is very mainstream, mostly aimed at frats, sororities, and sports fans (which is fine -- I like sports, too -- but that shouldn't be the primary thing to do in a college town). I can see why it ranked highly here, because State College does have a lot of bike trails and areas for hiking, which seemed to be big in this analysis.
@StephenConte-n1s Жыл бұрын
As a non-USian, college towns really fascinate me as they don’t really exist where I’m from. I’d love to visit one and see what the vibe is like. You’ve given me a good list to start with ✌️
@thebluest_blue1145 Жыл бұрын
same - in Australia many universities are right in the centre of big cities, they're not separate. I live in Sydney Australia, continued living with parents all throughout undergrand since several of the country's best universities were within an hour's commute on public transport. Most students lived at home or in shared housing in the city, stayed friends with high school friends who often live close by.
@lord_of_love_and_thunder Жыл бұрын
@@thebluest_blue1145 I did college in the US and met many Australians. For the average person, the Australian way is much better. College housing costs in the US run into thousands of dollars a year, and there is not much to do in the vast majority of US college towns.
@thebluest_blue1145 Жыл бұрын
@@lord_of_love_and_thunder Housing is expensive here too, around 200aud for the average shared housing (part of why many live at home). Being in the big city definitely has advantages though, my friends and I saw amazing shows at the Sydney Opera House with Opera Australia's $35 student rush tickets.
@saratemp790 Жыл бұрын
Most US college towns are not big, you have to go to the big and nice ones. And trust me there will be a lot to do
@TheJhtlag Жыл бұрын
Part of the "vibe" is that's where lots of money ends up, so you have what might have been an otherwise prosaic town with lots of nice restaurants, entertainment, shows coming through, eg, rock, jazz classical and lots of educated people with educated hobbies and things to do and of course, lots of young people doing young people things. One might contend it has gotten a little bit beyond just educating students.
@godminnette2 Жыл бұрын
I figured Ann Arbor would be on this list, and am glad it is. If it weren't for the cost of living, it'd be my ideal place to live in the US.
@wildrice8199 Жыл бұрын
Except for the weather
@godminnette2 Жыл бұрын
@@wildrice8199 I like colder weather!
@davik9003 Жыл бұрын
@@wildrice8199 the weather is wonderful here, we don't get any of the crazy lake effect snow here. Doesn't get too hot, and there are amazing lakes all over the state and surrounding the state. I will take the "cold" lmao.
@wildrice8199 Жыл бұрын
@@davik9003 I lived there for 4 years and in Michigan for 30. It was always too cold for me, even in the summer. There's no such thing as "too hot" for me. But glad other people like it. It's a great city otherwise.
@gogreen7794 Жыл бұрын
@@davik9003I grew up in Grand Rapids (in the snow belt of Lake Michigan.) I attended grad school in Ann Arbor and was surprised how relatively little snow AA received the two winters I was there, compared to GR. AA received even less snow, overall, than East Lansing.
@urbanistdad Жыл бұрын
I love seeing Ithaca come in so highly on this list, but please don't forget it is also the home of Ithaca College in addition to Cornell University. I know Cornell is 4x the size of IC by student population, but we still exist!
@aceshigh5338 Жыл бұрын
I'm really surprised to see Bellingham, WA wasn't on this list/not even an honorable mention. About 30,000 of the 95,000 residents are students. Great walkability downtown + in Fairhaven and a healthy and growing bike culture as well. Plus, it has some great regional rail connections to Seattle and Vancouver BC! Great video tho.
@Boomaroo96 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. Didn't need a car until I graduated and had to commute to Burlington. However, I'm seeing 16,000 as the enrollment. That would put it below the 25% metric he was using.
@kellinbonilla3507 Жыл бұрын
It's a great city and you definitely don't need a car! Excellent walkability in those places you've mentioned and of course on campus. But with that said, the bicycle infrastructure is a bit lacking (which I think translates into low commuting number) and we don't have a pedestrianized street. Hopefully with time that can all change though!! Fingers crossed.
@aceshigh5338 Жыл бұрын
If you include Whatcom Community College and Bellingham Technical College you get an additional 12-14 thousand students to Western's 16,000. It makes me wonder if he accounted for community/technical colleges or if he based the % purely off the main college in town.@@Boomaroo96
@lancewwu Жыл бұрын
@@Boomaroo96yea but Whatcom Community College has almost 12,000 students, then add in Bellingham Tech and NW Indian College and you get to 30,000 for Bellingham college students
@patriciamays8244 Жыл бұрын
My daughter went to Bellingham
@jacksonbsleadd Жыл бұрын
In my first year at UVA, and I really enjoy how walkable Charlottesville is. The walkable downtown is a great place to spend a Saturday.
@bebel0ck Жыл бұрын
As a Mississippi State alum, it was satisfying to see you dunk on Oxford, MS, although I’m not confident Starkville fares much better. I will say they retired Colonel Reb over a decade ago, but they still call themselves the Rebels. Insidious stuff. Your note about “dunking on this poor state” was appreciated and I just want to say, so many people from out of state of all races attend our state universities and have amazing experiences. Jackson State is an HBCU with students from all over the country who are proud to make it their alma mater. And not to mention international students who call Mississippi their first home in the U.S. College in Mississippi was a sweet and special time for me and I’m glad to see at least a piece of that conversation make it on this list.
@rogerblakely8462 Жыл бұрын
CityNerd said that he lived in Las Vegas, which has the UNLV Runnin’ Rebels, so he shouldn’t hold that against anyone. As for diversity, the cities on his list average below 5% African-American population, while Oxford is at 22%.
@bebel0ck Жыл бұрын
@@rogerblakely8462Yes but Mississippi is ~38% Black so for the state that demographic is actually underrepresented. It’s mainly because we have prominent public HBCUs in MS, though.
@ChanceBSmith Жыл бұрын
You have to do top 10 urbanism Cheesecake Factory location
@joshyoerger5271 Жыл бұрын
Commenting to vote for the transit funding video idea you mentioned in the video.
@MrMasterprocrastinat Жыл бұрын
The funny thing about Corvallis that often gets overlooked is its neighbor Albany. It's not a college town, but being right next door it's kind of Corvallis's more affordable twin. The urbanism there is just about as top-notch for some of the cheaper rents in the Willamette Valley! Highly recommend taking a look at the town for anyone that's considered moving to Oregon.
@PCSPounder Жыл бұрын
Now that Albany doesn’t smell so much, perhaps yes. Is there regular bus service to Corvallis?
@TheWillRogers Жыл бұрын
I don't think Albany has good design at all. The busses are sporadic and the gaps of time between stops is too long. It's not uncommon for me to get calls to from family/friends to go pick them up because their bus never came lol. It takes less time for me to walk from the mall to the park & ride in North Albany than it does to take the bus the same distance. Rent is cheaper (I pay $1400 for my apartment) , but it's still absurd for the area income. Albany is only worth it because it's close to CV which has stuff to do, but isn't as expensive. Riding your bike in Albany is also outright mortifying.
@TheWillRogers Жыл бұрын
@@PCSPounder There's a very small park & ride in North Albany that connects to HP a few times a day.
@iamsandrewsmith Жыл бұрын
State College native here! Nice to see my hometown recognized for its merits (for once). I wish it had passenger rail -- the closest Amtrak station is Lewistown, PA, with one train per day each way -- but it was once served by a short line called the Bellefonte Central. There was one train per day, taking 90 minutes to get to Bellefonte, the county seat 10 miles away. Not exactly high speed or high frequency...
@ephraimsutherland1989 Жыл бұрын
Also very surprised New Haven didn’t make the list. The walkability is certainly confined to certain neighborhoods but they make up a sizable portion of the area surrounding downtown.
@imhappy5266 Жыл бұрын
As they said on College Gameday this year: Boulder is the town everyone talks about, but Fort Collins, CO is the one you gotta visit before you die.
@DavidLaburglier Жыл бұрын
Boulder is the Elon Musk of Colorado college towns. Fort Collins is, oh dunno, just a nice chill person you'd want to actually be friends with.
@maxpowr90 Жыл бұрын
Burlington, VT has two Amtrak lines: The Ethan Allen Express and the Vermonter. There is a proposal to link them up but it's just in the idea stage.
@Shako_Lamb Жыл бұрын
An important detail you skipped about Burlington, VT is that there's a 30 minute public bus ride (Bus 2) between downtown Burlington and the Amtrak Vermonter stop in Essex Junction. And they made all buses free during the pandemic and keep extending it, so that ride is still free now. I'm at UVM for grad school, I would have liked to live in downtown Burlington, but the housing situation is pretty bad (demand increasing way faster than supply). It took me almost 3 months to find a place to live, but ended up in Essex Junction, so it turned out not too bad.
@NoTimeForNoodles Жыл бұрын
The Amtrak Ethan Allen Express which departs from the waterfront Burlington Union Station is usually the better choice and faster to get to New York City. That said, the Vermonter is useful for Connecticut and western Mass trips.
@Shako_Lamb Жыл бұрын
@@NoTimeForNoodles True! Honestly I haven't used either one.
@NoTimeForNoodles Жыл бұрын
@@Shako_LambWould recommend! Super comfortable, calming, and a great way to avoid the stress and costs of flying.
@kenctravels Жыл бұрын
I stayed in Essex Junction this past Summer for four nights. It certainly has its conveniences relative to Burlington and the affordability certainly helps.
@Shako_Lamb Жыл бұрын
@@kenctravels As far as housing goes it isn't affordable by a long shot, but it's pleasant and it's easy to get into Burlington for sure.
@brendanreilly2580 Жыл бұрын
Happy to see Burly make the top three. Im 8.5 minutes on foot from my office, 7 minutes from Cafe Hot (which you should try when you visit), and 15 minutes from the waterfront parks. Please don’t triangulate my location
@charlienyc1 Жыл бұрын
See you in 5 mins! 😂
@tvd1188 Жыл бұрын
I'd pair Amherst and Northampton as the same place. Theres a great trail between the two, as well as several college run buses. The 5 colleges between the two towns do share classes with each and folks pretty much use the two interchangeably. Bonus points for the home of Dinosaur Jr/Sebadoh and where Sonic Youth was based for 20 years.
@peterinbrat Жыл бұрын
Northampton is much nicer and compact...
@matthewconstantine5015 Жыл бұрын
Love Charlottesville, VA. Probably the smallest city I'd ever seriously contemplate living in.
@lucasmelac1464 Жыл бұрын
Awesome to see Corvallis represented in this list! People often site Eugene as the best college town in Oregon but I always thought that had more to do with them having a more relevant football team. Corvallis is such a charming college town that is so easily to walk and bike around.
@PCSPounder Жыл бұрын
Based on our dear nerd’s criteria, I believe UO has too few students for the size of the Eugene/Springfield metropolis. More interesting… the campus has kind of scraped at the edges for more space, and they’ve finally gotten around to replacing 1960s-era dorm buildings, but given the chance to build up rather than out, the only thing on the campus that has attained some sort of height is the observation tower over Hayward Field that looks like a spliff. I blame Phil Knight. Still, go Ducks!
@henneds Жыл бұрын
The guy wearing the UW coat is absolutely not giving Eugene any love. 😂
@PCSPounder Жыл бұрын
@@henneds If you just came here for the college banter, I know, I know. Silly Fuskies and their ability to whine like malamutes do can be an issue at times. I’ll also put it this way… my father was the city engineer in Portland when the first light rail line was designed and eventually constructed. I have an affinity to the broader subject matter here that overrides the other stuff.
@ZephyrFate Жыл бұрын
It is the best college town in terms of walk and bikeability. Eugene has only been increasing bike accessibility including carving out busy streets to have dedicated, protected bike lanes.
@zeearchers720 Жыл бұрын
Is the population difference the only reason Eugene, OR was left off the list? Because, Corvallis AND Boulder?? Geeez.
@dalerosenthal6779 Жыл бұрын
What happened to Champaign-Urbana? They've usually been top or near-top on your transit lists; plus, trains to Chicago at their bus station.
@findmeinthefuture. Жыл бұрын
He mentioned in another comment that it came in at number 16 on this list, and that its bike mode share was very low, which dragged it down the list a bit.
@ZombieApocalypse09 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Ann Arbor. Great city. The move towards more walkability downtown after the start of the pandemic has been really great. And you can't beat the feel of Kerrytown. It's only struggle is affordable housing because everybody in southeast michigan wants to live there.
@trise4 Жыл бұрын
2:50 San Luis Obispo, CA 3:44 Corvallis, OR 4:36 Charlottesville, VA 5:17 Ann Arbor, MI 5:54 Boulder, CO 7:02 Amherst, MA 7:52 Davis, CA 10:54 Burlington, VT 11:35 Ithica, NY 12:05 State College, PA
@Zack-pq4hz Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!! 🎉❤
@thomasnewton8223 Жыл бұрын
Waiting for the Amtrak Iowa city expansion from Chicago. Having family in iowa city while being car free is awful and my options are Greyhound busses which are always packed full. There’s very much demand!
@LiamMcBride Жыл бұрын
I wish they’d also run local rail up to CR and Waterloo to reduce dependence on I-380 for moving between those places as traffic is a nightmare especially between CR and IC
@RobertDetert Жыл бұрын
Will probably never happen. Because you're dealing with Illinois. Ii live in Illinois. It's probably the most screwed up state in America
@thomasnewton8223 Жыл бұрын
@@RobertDetert Illinois is good about building railroads. Iowa is the bigger concern here.
@jonmcclung5597 Жыл бұрын
10. San Luis Obispo, CA 9. Corvallis, OR 8. Charlottesville, VA 7. Ann Arbor, MI 6. Boulder, CO 5. Amherst, MA 4. Davis, CA 3. Burlington, VT 2. Ithaca, NY 1. State College, PA
@barryrobbins7694 Жыл бұрын
I know you are trying to be helpful, but Ray has mentioned before that he doesn’t appreciate spoilers.
@barryrobbins7694 Жыл бұрын
@pryvexx I get it. It’s also nice to have a reference, but if you like these videos you can help support them by watching the whole video. The creator gets paid based on views. I’ll just have to watch it twice from now on.😀
@markweaver1012 Жыл бұрын
One thing that bumps Ann Arbor in my estimation is the convenience of getting to one of the nicest airports in the U.S. -- an easy half drive to an airport that's a hub for Delta (the major airline that sucks the least) and offers non-stops pretty much everywhere. (Nerd wouldn't like it, though, since there's no rail serving the airport). Still, airport accessibility (and quality) seems like it should be a ratings factor.
@jazzfan7491 Жыл бұрын
Back in 2005, moved to Fredericksburg, VA to take care of of my mother who had just received a cancer diagnosis. Realized while I was there that the small college town was the best place to live.
@thetennisjournal Жыл бұрын
I just had to comment as someone who just returned from Oxford UK and went to ole Miss in Oxford Mississippi. Oxford Mississippi is actually pretty walkable around the the square it also has a good cultural and artistic feel. The problem is its very hard to go in and out of Oxford without a car because as far as I know there's no trains or buses in and out. Oxford MS isn't Oxford UK but it's a very nice college town and I have definitely seen worse.
@TheJhtlag Жыл бұрын
I suspect this is a desk exercise and he hasn't really visited many of these places. I also suspect when you name your town "Oxford" in 1830 it is aspirational (you know, like Utica) and not really hubris*. Also, the U of Miss hasn't had that mascot in 13 years. one can even read that in his cut and paste. Seemed like a free shot. *Also could have simply been a guy from Oxfordshire naming the place from where he came from like many cities and towns in the US.
@thetennisjournal Жыл бұрын
@@TheJhtlag yes 100 percent you can't just look at statistics briefly or just throw out an old mascot to have a conclusion about the place.
@starkeymorgan4142 Жыл бұрын
Yep, he doesn't need to go there for any reason. I like Ole Miss just the way it is.@@TheJhtlag
@TheJhtlag Жыл бұрын
@@starkeymorgan4142 Yep, didn't need to go there for any reason. I'm also finding it highly unlikely he's ever "dunked" on anyone unless it was with a donut. I'm sure a lot of these places are nice but now that we've seen the hidden side of his "methodology" why would I trust his opinions?.
@tarico4436 Жыл бұрын
Faulkner attended the University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS. That's William Faulkner, our greatest writer.