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Subject: Interesting...


Author:
Dave (UK)
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Date Posted: 16:35:09 12/14/04 Tue
In reply to: Nick (UK) 's message, "Sadly not all are in agreement" on 13:21:17 12/14/04 Tue

As ignorant as some of these views may seem, I have to say that I am in general agreement with a few of their observations.

Although Britain’s city-centres are very old, and have some of the most architecturally stunning buildings, they also have some of the ugliest hinterlands in the western world.

Few cities or towns in Britain (and none in Scotland) have been spared the scar of 60/70s misguided social engineering. Most cities in Britain are littered with, gap sites, empty shop fronts, chewing gum covered pavements, bill posters, graffiti and litter. I stayed in Bayswater once, and would not wish to do so again.

Take a look at any post-industrial city like Glasgow/Liverpool etc, and the story is the same. I work in Glasgow, spend a lot of time in this city, socialise here, and generally love it. However, I also know that I can sip a latte in a marble-clad Victorian masterpiece, take a five minute walk, and end up in Kabul. Any tourist could potentially find this out the hard way.

I work in an area of Glasgow full of beautiful Georgian townhouses. Is this were London, they would be in pristine condition, and cost 750 grand a pop. I am currently looking at a former hotel, with its beautiful but crumbling sandstone façade, wrought-iron railings, and boarded up windows. I despair, I really do.

Contrast this with Vancouver, and the picture is night and day, with pavements you could eat your dinner off of and vandalism-free streets/trains/bus shelters. Where there is emptiness and dereliction, you can be assured there will be a gleaming tower within six months.

I was quite frankly embarrassed at what I saw, and I thought at the time that any Canadian that visits a provincial city here that is not on the picture-postcard trail, would be thoroughly disappointed. In Vancouver, I found that I had to be told where the bad areas were, even when I was in them. However, in Britain, these areas are patently obvious, and require only the opening of the eyes to identify. I did not see any obvious slums over there, that are so easy to spot here.

This country needs to get its act together with regard to the full-scale regeneration/restoration of our old buildings, and the flattening and rebuilding of all that is bad. If Singapore can do it, so can we.

On the subject of Starbucks, I think Vancouver must have as many, if not more than Seattle, or anywhere else. In fact, if Vancouver were to have any more Starbucks, I’m sure some of them would be next-door neighbours. I even saw two on either side of a crossroads. I don’t think we are as bad as that yet. However, if a Starbucks can replace an empty shop, I’m all for it.

Unfortunately Jim, Walmart own our supermarket chain ASDA…

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Toronto is gettiing filthy


Author:
Jim (Canada)
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Date Posted: 17:56:38 12/14/04 Tue

When I was growing up, Toronto was so clean you could walk barefoot on the sidewalk and you would not injure yourself. Today, the city is filthy - strewn with garbage, there are homeless people everywhere and the roads are full of potholes. This is an embarrassment for Canada's largest city. Many American visitors have commented on this in our local press. Even the mayor is so embarrassed by it, that he has ordered a street clean-up campaign in next year's budget. Too bad he hasn't put enough money into fixing the roads.

I know that Walmart owns ASDA, but at least it kept the ASDA name. In our case, all our Woolco stores were renamed as Walmart and they look exactly like their counterparts in the USA. They do, however, carry Canadian-made products, but they are the cheapest and most poor-quality brands, like a pair of rubber boots which are actually made of a cheap vinyl, or a kettle that doesn't work, or underwear that tears after wearing them only a couple of times (this has been my experience of Walmart Canada - I am going to go back to shopping at the Hudson's Bay Company.

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Well said...


Author:
Ed Harris (Venezia)
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Date Posted: 22:02:26 12/14/04 Tue

Living abroad for much of the time (but returning permanently next week, thank god), I have found it easier to look at Britain through the eyes of an outsider. I remember, not long ago, driving from my place in Fitzrovia to my aunt's place in Kew. Two lovely Georgian villages in the middle of London, you might say. En route, however, one has to go through that dread zone known as South of the River, and frankly some of it nearly brought tears to my eyes. The ugly stained concrete cubes next to the windswept carparks with no cars in them, the utter desolation around Waterloo Station, and generally the absolute ghastliness until one gets as far west as Hammersmith - all this in Zone One, don't forget. I remember feeling a sudden and powerful swell of admiration for Mrs T., until whose stubbornness and refusal to compromise with The Enemy Within this country was so broke that the only things with which we could afford to fill the bomb craters were the mind-buggeringly awful concrete prefabs which have ruined the town. I remember London in the late 80s and I look at it now, and they could be two different cities in different countries: a country on the way down has been replaced with a country in which the wealth, confidence, brashness, fatness and fashion are back, and there is no place where this is more obvious than the capital. It will be a black day for all of us when she passes away.

Be that as it may, the work is not yet done, and there are an awful lot of NCP carparks and whatnot which need to be condemned and destroyed before Canadian backpackers are likely to be impressed. In fairness to Nick's Gruesome Twosome, backpackers don't have a lot of cash and probably have to stay in the nastier parts of town, which may explain their attitudes.

Oh, and to quote the great Marge Simpson on holiday in Toronto: "Oo, it's so clean and bland... I'm home!" Give me Detroit any day, where the chance of getting shot in the head and the entertaining hard-luck stories of hobos keep one amused, and where the piles of rubbish throw the clean bits into sharper focus!

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[> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Toronto is no longer clean - it's getting like Detroit with crime, filth and homelessness


Author:
Jim (Canada)
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Date Posted: 22:24:05 12/14/04 Tue


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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Splendid!


Author:
Ed Harris (Venezia)
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Date Posted: 23:29:43 12/14/04 Tue

I make it one of my rules in life never to waste an air-fare going to a city which scores highly on the annual UN Top 100 Cities list. They are all places like Geneva, Copenhagen, the Hague, or, worse still, bloody Vaduz. They are scored according to a lot of categories in which no sane person could possibly be interested unless that person were Swiss: cleanliness, crime-rates, levels of air-poluion, noise-polution, absense of grafitti, efficacy of traffic lights, proliferation of pedestrian crossings, disabled access to bungee jumping events, straightness of white-lines up the middle of the road, and so forth. You get the idea.

As a result, Basle and Stockholm are invariably decreed to be Greater Cities than London and New York. Such twaddle. The idea is to look for the cities about half-way down the list: say, way after Zurich and way before Baghdad. If Toronto has joined this list, then I will be the first at Canada House in Trafalgar Square clutching my passport and pointing out just how valuable a Canadian citizen I would be...

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Criteria...


Author:
Dave (UK)
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Date Posted: 15:47:41 12/15/04 Wed

Whereas I would agree that some of the cities you list are pretty, but essentially soulless places, I think you are being a bit unfair in dismissing the criteria with which they are judged.

I would assume that the absence of graffiti and litter from a city would denote the absence of feckless yobs, or the presence of law enforcement: both of which I think are desirable characteristics.

If London had no ghettos, no commie-blocks, no litter and perfectly painted white lines, would it not be perfect?

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Depends how you look at it.


Author:
Ed Harris (Venezia)
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Date Posted: 16:33:26 12/15/04 Wed

In my opinion, these negative things which you list are the inevitable symptoms of things which we would miss were they abolished: vitality, tolerance, and above all a relaxed attitude towards minor irritants.

In Singapore, there is no chewing gum on the streets, but this has been achieved at the cost of the most stomach-churning authoritarian measures which we would not accept in London. Road accidents in Geneva are rare, but I have been at pedestrian crossings in Switzerland, and watched as the natives stand at a red light, waiting for it to go green, in spite of the fact that there are no cars coming in either direction.

Indeed, on one occasion when I just charged across an empty side-street with a complete disregard for the fact that the little green man had not yet lit up, an elderly lady remonstrated with me, drawing my attention (in the Swiss' quaint imitation of German) to the little red man's continuing presence in our lives... and I was able to stand in the middle of the road and listen to her do this because of the total absence of traffic. I suspect that she went away with the conclusion that I was one of those notoriously eccentric and erratic Italian visitors, what with all this crossing-the-road-outside-the-prescribed-moment madness, the like of which she had only previously seen on a shopping trip to Milan to get furs.

I stand by my contention that the world's cleanest and safest cities have had all the life sucked out of them. Perfection is, after all, just another trade name for blandness.

As for removing feckless yobs from London, I think that we pretty much have; or, rather, we have moved them out of London Proper to the Dreaded Outskirts (a solution borrowed form Paris, I should think), where they can't bother anyone except for other feckless yobs ;-)

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: 'vitality'


Author:
Ian (who lives there)
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Date Posted: 00:18:39 12/16/04 Thu

You'd love Porto Alegre, Ed. It is seething with vitality: the smell of it can be overwhelming at times, you have to be careful not to step in it when you are walking around in town, it almost certainly will never stop for you at a pedestrian crossing, it avoids any unnecessary proximity to silly foppish concerns like the rule of law, and as soon as it can scrape together a few million in embezzled public funds, you can sure it will be hiding it away out of sight in those lovely tax havens of yours. Oh, and it's also terribly proud of being the Brazilian capital with the highest quality of life.

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: So how much are flights from London?


Author:
Ed Harris (Venezia)
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Date Posted: 01:07:20 12/16/04 Thu

I've spent far too much time in the 3rd world to me much concerned with odours and corruption... In fact, if I couldn't live in London I'd probably choose Bombay. Such fun.

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: I hear Bogotá is quite nice at this time of the year...


Author:
Dave (UK)
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Date Posted: 09:44:27 12/16/04 Thu


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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: In defence of Geneva...


Author:
Herr Schweiz
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Date Posted: 13:13:59 12/15/04 Wed

Geneva isn't such a bad place. It's got the lake, which is stunning in the summer. It has snow in the winter, and the potential to get way up into the mountains in about half an hour by train. It's one of the most international and cosmopolitan cities on the planet. It has the best pizza with chanterelles and porcini in the world, not to mention the occasional fondue restaurant if you come over all alpine all of a sudden. And, what's more, it's not in the EU! Anyone else with me on this?

And Ed, surely Roma, Milan, Napoli, Torino and all of the other major Italian cities would rank right near the top on your list. Why the constant moaning about Italia, mate? Best country in the world, imho.

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Hm.


Author:
Ed Harris (Venezia)
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Date Posted: 15:46:44 12/15/04 Wed

I wasn't being entirely serious, you know...say, 50%! And Geneva is all right to visit, but one wouldn't want to live there. Notwithstandling its extra-E.U. status, I rather think that there are more fascinating cities... grime is evidence of a bit of life. A lot of Swiss towns remind me of wards in an expensive private hospital.

And yes, Rome, Milan, Naples and Turin are all very jolly. Now there are cities which are lived in, and you can tell from the chaos and the mess! Venice, on the other hand, is rather like the Swiss cities: beautiful, international, but about half the size of Highgate Cemetry and twice as dead. If I had to live anywhere in Italy, though, it would certainly be Milan. But does this make Italy the best country in the world? I doubt it, since I doubt that any country can seriously claim that accolade.

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