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2. Chicago: 130,876,187
3. Washington DC: 107,337,311
4. San Francisco: 65,214,945
5. Boston: 62,659,674 (This may be some homerism, but it should be noted that Downtown Cambridge--which is about a 15-20 minute walk from Government Center in Boston--has another 20,413,443 square feet)
6. Seattle: 45,378,727
7. Philadelphia: 44,228,375
8. Dallas: 37,034,020
9. Houston: 36,245,075
10. Los Angeles: 32,159,551
In terms of population, obviously NYC is king again, but from what I remember, the next ones go something like:
SF 105,000
Philadelphia 78,000
Boston 77,000
Chicago 50,000
DC 40,000
I believe Baltimore is high on the residential population too...
This list is a bit off. DT Houston is bigger than DT Dallas, however according to the Grubb Ellis Report The DFW downtown includes DT Dallas and DT Fort Worth.
The two DT are in different areas of the metro, wonder why they combine them and not combine districts that are in between the two. Very odd, but no, the Downtown of Dallas is not bigger than Houstons.
This list is a bit off. DT Houston is bigger than DT Dallas, however according to the Grubb Ellis Report The DFW downtown includes DT Dallas and DT Fort Worth.
The two DT are in different areas of the metro, wonder why they combine them and not combine districts that are in between the two. Very odd, but no, the Downtown of Dallas is not bigger than Houstons.
Thanks for correcting my oversight. Why in the world would they ever combine those like that? It seems kind of strange.
Also, San francisco seems pretty high on the office space category. But besides your list, it seems pretty good.
I'm not creating these numbers...this is hard research done by an office market company. SF's got a huge downtown and it shouldn't be a big surprise they've got such a large number.
Thanks for correcting my oversight. Why in the world would they ever combine those like that? It seems kind of strange.
I dunno. Like I said it is rather odd. They skipped uptown Dallas which is just across the highway from DT Dallas but they added DT Fort Worth 30 miles away. Really odd that they didn't do it for the twin cities too for the top ten because St Paul is much closer and land MSP at number 8.
I dunno. Like I said it is rather odd. They skipped uptown Dallas which is just across the highway from DT Dallas but they added DT Fort Worth 30 miles away. Really odd that they didn't do it for the twin cities too for the top ten because St Paul is much closer and land MSP at number 8.
I don't know....I remember there was another study which showed the "Downtown Populations" of cities and it combined SF & SJ...maybe since they count two (relatively) major cities in the same metro, they just combine their CBDs by default? No clue.
Personally, I think Cambridge is closer to downtown than Midtown/Downtown Atlanta (or at least equal), and believe it or not U City is actually included in those Philly statistics. It's all close though.
Cant include the residential population; maybe the commercial sq footage though I thought I read a recent report on commercial space that would show the number close to your for CC and another ~15 million (60% research space) in U City. Will see if I can dredge that up. But on residential the 78K does not include U City (40K alone according to the 2010 Census data and CC is ~ 2 times this population)
Cant include the residential population; maybe the commercial sq footage though I thought I read a recent report on commercial space that would show the number close to your for CC and another ~15 million (60% research space) in U City. Will see if I can dredge that up. But on residential the 78K does not include U City (40K alone according to the 2010 Census data and CC is ~ 2 times this population)
Oh yea I was only looking at the office space. Let me know what you find!
Brasil is going very well actually. I landed in a good job and I've been able to experience a lot of cool new stuff. It's also allowed me to see the things we have that are much better (the QOL is much higher and easier) and things we have worse (the most glaring thing I've experienced is that American food is TERRIBLE...the food here is better on every single count).
Oh yea I was only looking at the office space. Let me know what you find!
Brasil is going very well actually. I landed in a good job and I've been able to experience a lot of cool new stuff. It's also allowed me to see the things we have that are much better (the QOL is much higher and easier) and things we have worse (the most glaring thing I've experienced is that American food is TERRIBLE...the food here is better on every single count).
That's one thing that always makes me depressed when I get back to the USA from S. America, Africa or Europe. I don't know what it is about our food compared to the rest of the world, but we process the hell out of everything in the name of mass production and shelf life. It really makes most things taste like garbage when you get out and see everything else.
Oh yea I was only looking at the office space. Let me know what you find!
Brasil is going very well actually. I landed in a good job and I've been able to experience a lot of cool new stuff. It's also allowed me to see the things we have that are much better (the QOL is much higher and easier) and things we have worse (the most glaring thing I've experienced is that American food is TERRIBLE...the food here is better on every single count).
According to this it would show ~40 million in CC with about 7.7 million in medical research space (that is Jefferson and Pennsylvania and Hahnamann and any of the UCity space)
That's one thing that always makes me depressed when I get back to the USA from S. America, Africa or Europe. I don't know what it is about our food compared to the rest of the world, but we process the hell out of everything in the name of mass production and shelf life. It really makes most things taste like garbage when you get out and see everything else.
Yea all the chemicals in our produce dumb-down the taste a lot--and I think they make the produce a bit more unhealthy too. Since arriving in Brasil I have eaten A LOT, but have lost about 15 pounds. Lunch is the biggest meal here and I eat a nauseating amount of picanha (a type of steak), cupim (another cut of steak), linguiça, Brasilian-style bacon, chicken, and rice & beans...but I don't stack on the weight like I would if I were back home.
From a food perspective, the only advantage I can find is with seafood...and not-surprisingly this type of food comes from non-farm fed creatures. I think the United States really needs to rethink what we're doing to our food.
**On a food-related note, the sushi here is amazing. The mixing of traditional Japanese style with Brasilian works very well. Sushi is fantastic alone...but top it off with maracujá (passion fruit) and it becomes magical.
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