Discuss the best North American skyline here.
Baltimore doesn't look dense at all and neither does Cincinnati.Philadelphia is insanely dense around Center City. Baltimore has a very dense core. DC has a dense core but lacks the highrises that most of us find interesting. So that's 7 big ones.
Then Pittsburgh and Cincinnati have fairly dense cores, and on a smaller city perspective you could throw in places like Providence, Portland ME, Allentown PA, Harrisburg, New Haven, and Albany among others. The Northeast is definitely the densest overall corridor in the US.
I think New Orleans is supposedly quite dense. Richmond VA also punches above its weight but part of that is more in comparison to other southern cities as opposed to vs the whole country.
Wrong.Baltimore doesn't look dense at all.....
Um what? Baltimore is literally just as dense as DC, Philly & Boston from a street grid/infill standpoint.Baltimore doesn't look dense at all and neither does Cincinnati.
Those photos don't have completed 1 Light, 414 Light, Liberty Harbor East, Willis Warf or Avalon 555 President lol....and the photos don't have One Light, which hadn't been completed when the photos were taken, which significantly added to the density. 414 Light can be seen under construction, but is a couple blocks outside the downtown core.
So we are comparing Baltimore, the principle city of it's own ~3 million metro and Cincinnati, the principe city of it's own ~2 million metro to...Cincinnati OH, is like a town in the DMV area , I think Arlington VA, Richmond VA, Baltimore MD, Silver Spring MD , Bethesda MD etc.. are a good match to it, overall Montgomery county has high density and growing population
I got you lol. National Guard did a fly over via Chinooks a few months back that shows a relatively updated city scape/skylineI recognize the Baltimore pics I posted were slightly old but couldn't find better ones for the purpose. I wanted ones that captured all of the surrounding midrises and rowhouse neighborhoods.
Metropolitan population determines these things. City boundaries are merely the area that a municipal government has governing authority over. Cincinnati is a metro of 2.1 million people. And while we're at it DC is a metro of 6.5 million people. They're both highly populated.For a city of only 300k... Cinci is plenty dense enough
I'm aware metro size dictates how large Downtowns/CBD sizes are, not city "proper" population.Metropolitan population determines these things. City boundaries are merely the area that a municipal government has governing authority over. Cincinnati is a metro of 2.1 million people. And while we're at it DC is a metro of 6.5 million people. They're both highly populated.
2nd best skyline in North America and the greatest city in the Midwest.