Welcome Guest Login Register Member List
ExpressionEngine Forums
Advanced Search
Username: Password:
Remember Me? forgot password?
You are here: Forum Home  >  Stories  >  CoolTown Stories  >  Thread
   
 
‘Outside - Top Renaissance Towns’ (2 of 2)
 
Neil Takemoto
Posted: 18 August 2008 10:12 AM   [ Ignore ]  
Administrator
Avatar
RankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  106
Joined  2008-07-03


Continuing our look at the best cities that are remixing, reinventing themselves, according to Best Towns 2008 from Outside magazine, here are five more, plus a number of honorable mentions:

Ithaca, New York - Conscientious innovation isn’t far off when you have Cornell University and Ithaca College as residents, and a median age of 22. The town is experiencing a green movement spearheaded by a new ecovillage, and the downtown is finally legitimizing the pedestrian-only district laid out a few decades ago.
Louisville, Kentucky - Much of the positive change in Louisville is being experienced by bicyclists, with new bikeways and bike lanes announced. The downtown is still not quite a creative hangout, anchored by a corporate entertainment center, though nearby Bardstown a couple of miles away definitely is.
Eureka, California - It has become the quintessential wilderness arts town in the middle of nowhere, gathering the community of 27,000 around a new five-block boardwalk.
Columbia, Missouri - First came an indie film house, then a film festival, then artist lofts, studios and cafes, combined with over 200 miles of bike trails, have made Columbia a southern outdoor activist’s haven.

Honorable Mentions:

Oxford, Mississippi - Fueled by its university, Ole Miss and a renowned Double Decker Arts Festival, held each spring and a mayor who runs a local indie biz.
Oakland, California - Oakland’s mayor in 1999, Jerry Brown, is making good on his promise to attract 10,000 new residents downtown.
Sacramento, California - A 240-acre redeveloping brownfield will nearly double the downtown district with 12,000 new homes, and a new 197-room boutique hotel, the Citizen, was named by Sacramento citizens.
Corvallis, Oregon - The second U.S. city (after Moab) recognized as an EPA Green Power Community, with a focus on wind and geothermal power, with a new riverfront park.
Wilmington, North Carolina - The “Wilmywood” filmmaking economy, North Carolina’s Hollywood, has helped direct scenes of a vibrant riverwalk and a historic district over 230 blocks.
Seattle, Washington - Mayor Greg Nickels has signed more than 850 U.S. cities to his U.S. Conference of Mayors Climate Protection Agreement, higher than Kyoto Protocol objectives, and calling for car free Sundays in August.
Charlottesville, Virginia - Boasts one of the most successful, largest pedestrian-only streets in the country (pictured), and one of the most comprehensive GIS-based urban tree programs.
Brattleboro, Vermont - Home to one of the largest farmers’ markets in New England, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farms, a predominance of locally-owned businesses, and resident-held nightly potluck dinners, Brattleboro is a sign of things to come.

Image source: Main Street, Charlottesville, Virginia by gargola87.

Profile
 
Marianne
Posted: 20 August 2008 04:46 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]  
Newbie
Rank
Total Posts:  4
Joined  2008-07-03

ITHACA: No mention of Ithaca College’s population or programs or on-campus building initiatives. Hmmm. Tourists seeking “pristine” lakes, gorges and vineyards helps as well. Local residents’ push for greener has brought about a lot as well. Hoping The Commons has found a way to be economically sustainable by now.

Profile
 
Neil Takemoto
Posted: 20 August 2008 05:06 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]  
Administrator
Avatar
RankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  106
Joined  2008-07-03

You definitely know your Ithaca - the original article source here does Ithaca College more justice than my write-up (which I updated). The three things I remember the most were how spectacular the gorges are, the vibrant college streetlife, and contra dancing, which is a direct reflection of how ‘crunchy’ Ithaca is smile

Profile
 
Marianne
Posted: 20 August 2008 05:14 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]  
Newbie
Rank
Total Posts:  4
Joined  2008-07-03

Ah. Forgot/didn’t know it was a summary. Sorry. Too quick with my typing.

As for knowing Ithaca, 25 years will do that. Granted, I didn’t think about it for the first 10+, but still. wink

Profile
 
   
 
 
‹‹ ’Outside: Top renaissance cities 2008’ (1 of 2)      Finally, Google Maps for the rest of us (walking, transit) ››

Powered By ExpressionEngine
Template Design By Sonnenvogel.com
Select a theme:

ExpressionEngine Discussion Forum - Version 2.1.0 (20080626)
Script Executed in 0.3000 seconds