Jacksonville's Rival City
#101
Posted 12 May 2007 - 10:50 PM
I now do have to change my vote to Tampa and/or Orlando just after having spent some time down there and not many people down there even knew anything about Charlotte but did talk about Tampa and Orlando quite a bit. I'm going down there again June 1st for a little longer than last time, but I imagine this will stay the same. I think Charlotte's true rival is Raleigh; I mean, they are competing for the same state funds and aren't all that far apart in location or size (metro, not city limits.) Jacksonville has a lot less in common with Charlotte than I had previously thought. I guess I was still looking at Jax through the close-minded eyes of a nine year old (how old I was when I moved away from there.)
#102
Posted 13 May 2007 - 03:28 AM
#103
Posted 13 June 2007 - 07:24 PM
As far as I can determine, our biggest rival is US! Neanderthal thinking at City Hall AND JTA!! Both placees seem to want us to stay Cowford. BRT is just a new way to BUILD ROADS TODAY or put another way, it's just BAD RAPID TRANSIT!
traintrain
#104
Posted 18 June 2007 - 05:20 PM
RALBOI, on Aug 7 2006, 02:41 PM, said:
#105
Posted 18 June 2007 - 09:37 PM
Anywho, remember that Jacksonville often gets placed on those lists as well. Raleigh isn't a bad place to live, but we are on the Jacksonville board here. Let's show the hometown some love!
#106
Posted 30 June 2007 - 01:12 PM
derrickskugler, on Jun 18 2007, 10:37 PM, said:
Anywho, remember that Jacksonville often gets placed on those lists as well. Raleigh isn't a bad place to live, but we are on the Jacksonville board here. Let's show the hometown some love!
Edited by RALBOI, 30 June 2007 - 01:19 PM.
#107
Posted 09 March 2008 - 11:56 AM
traintrain, on Jun 13 2007, 08:24 PM, said:
As far as I can determine, our biggest rival is US! Neanderthal thinking at City Hall AND JTA!! Both placees seem to want us to stay Cowford. BRT is just a new way to BUILD ROADS TODAY or put another way, it's just BAD RAPID TRANSIT!
I agree its not ideal, and that LRT is a better option all around, but BRT can be an effective solution. There are cities out there that have used BRT and it works.
#108
Posted 17 March 2008 - 08:11 AM
#110
Posted 06 July 2008 - 09:37 PM
#111
Posted 07 July 2008 - 02:55 AM
asonj23, on Mar 17 2008, 08:11 AM, said:
Man, we were once the railroad capital of the south. (Not capitol, right? I forgot which one is which, but I'm sticking with 'a' cause it looks right in this context...and it's late) There are four companies with working rail lines in Jax. CSX is HQ'd there. It's embarassing that we have no commuter rail of any sort. You, sir, are absolutely correct. Utilize the existing rail...and implement "BRT" (or at least what the JTA calls BRT) to service the rail-less corridors. Let's just take care of this now. It's ridiculous...if we start now, we'll have a faux-comprehensive commuter rail system in 10-15 years. If we wait to get started? Even longer. If we go the BRT route? Maybe never! Augh!
aussie luke, on Aug 19 2006, 11:08 AM, said:
I know none of this has to do with a rivalry, but I figured I'd take back a lot of what I've said the two cities have in common. I can't let my dog swim in the ocean and chase birds at the beach in Charlotte.
I appreciate your kind words about Jax. For the last six years now I've been in college and grad school outside of my hometown of Jacksonville, and in a way I've been quite detached and apathetic about all the development there. But over the past year, with the traveling and growing I've done (epiphanies included) I've started to really take pride in my Jacksonville roots. And while the mess with downtown development (particularly given the economic downturn over the last 2 years) and mass transit has driven me nuts, based on my memories I think for what it is, Jacksonville is an amazing city in which to grow up, and to a lesser extent, to live in. The place has so much to offer from a physical standpoint, that once the population fills out in the next decade (particularly with the right demographic that has been brought in by all the new major corporations) and that population demands an improved transit system and urban core, man...it will be a very desirable place to live. But once more, I repeat, the city is already great for what it is...an amalgamation of american suburbia, but each with their own flavors...from OP to the Beaches and everywhere in between. If I weren't such a city guy (naturally drawn to the Manhattan and Chicago's Loop) then Jax would be perfect as is.
As for this thread's original question...after 5 seconds of skimming the choices and an additional 5 seconds of deliberation, I went with Tampa. It was simple...gut instinct from a Jacksonville native. Growing up I think I would always have considered Tampa to be the most similar to Jax. A little bit larger, but very similar. I could also very easily accept the argument that we have no rival...cause we really are quite unique in potential and geographical layout. But that feels too much like a cop out.
Edited by ProjectMaximus, 07 July 2008 - 02:56 AM.
#112
Posted 07 July 2008 - 10:58 AM
Both are industrial.
Both are on the water, but neither are on the ocean/gulf.
Both have tons of sprawl.
Both have the military (Jax Navy, Tampa Army).
Jax has I-95 for Northeasterners going to Miami, Tampa has I-75 for Midwesterners going to Miami.
Jaguars v. Bucs
etc.
Orlando doesn't have much in common with Jax other than proximity. Miami has even less in common with Jax.
#113
Posted 10 July 2008 - 12:17 AM
USF_Rockstar, on Jul 7 2008, 10:58 AM, said:
Both are industrial.
Both are on the water, but neither are on the ocean/gulf.
Both have tons of sprawl.
Both have the military (Jax Navy, Tampa Army).
Jax has I-95 for Northeasterners going to Miami, Tampa has I-75 for Midwesterners going to Miami.
Jaguars v. Bucs
etc.
Orlando doesn't have much in common with Jax other than proximity. Miami has even less in common with Jax.
#114
Posted 16 July 2008 - 07:13 PM
metrowester, you have a great point about Charlotte vs Jacksonville. After having lived in Charlotte for a while now, and having spend a lot of my youth in Jacksonville, Jax has a much older urban core, and so it retains that "city" feeling much more than Charlotte does. Districts evolve over time. Charlotte is just starting to see distinct districts form, and I expect that the locals will tell you of the same thing in Jax. I would be interested to hear what districts the locals see evolving today.
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