UK cities
UK cities
I've excluded London as it'd be a runaway winner. What we're left with are the biggest cities in England and Scotland, altho' Newcastle is a bit further down the list (Hull, Stoke, Derby are bigger, among others, which surprised me).
Choose your three favourites, for whatever reason.
(some interesting stats here)
Choose your three favourites, for whatever reason.
(some interesting stats here)
- Goat Boy
- Bogarting the joint
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Re: UK cities
I'm slightly biased but it has to be Edinburgh. It's the prettiest by far.
I love Glasgow as well and it has the friendliest people in my opinion.
I love Glasgow as well and it has the friendliest people in my opinion.
Last edited by Goat Boy on 02 Aug 2011, 11:06, edited 1 time in total.
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- Insouciant Western People
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Re: UK cities
Newcastle, obviously. It's home. But I'd love it even if it wasn't.
I also went for Edinburgh and Liverpool. I've been visiting Edinburgh since I was a kid, and I've always loved it. It's a beautiful city.
I only went to Liverpool for the first time about 18 months ago, but I've spent a lot of time there since then and grown to really like the people and the place.
I also went for Edinburgh and Liverpool. I've been visiting Edinburgh since I was a kid, and I've always loved it. It's a beautiful city.
I only went to Liverpool for the first time about 18 months ago, but I've spent a lot of time there since then and grown to really like the people and the place.
Jeff K wrote:Nick's still the man! No one has been as consistent as he has been over such a long period of time.
- McBastard
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Re: UK cities
Edinburgh, Glasgow, Newcastle, in that order.
I've been to Liverpool twice, and quite liked it.
Visited Birmingham once, it didn't make much of an impression.
Been through Sheffield on a bus a couple of times. same with Leeds. I spent a couple of hours in Leeds, not enough to see much.
I've only been to Manchester for the airport, and one other time by mistake.
I've been to Liverpool twice, and quite liked it.
Visited Birmingham once, it didn't make much of an impression.
Been through Sheffield on a bus a couple of times. same with Leeds. I spent a couple of hours in Leeds, not enough to see much.
I've only been to Manchester for the airport, and one other time by mistake.
May the Lord have mercy on Stringy Bob
- Zilth Pilchards
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Re: UK cities
Newcastle and Sheffield.
Birmingham should register as nothing.
Birmingham should register as nothing.
- Insouciant Western People
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Re: UK cities
Yeah, Brum is just... meh. A bit like Derby. I still can't believe I lived in or around Derby for a third of my life. How the fuck did I end up in such a nothing place for so long ?
It's a real pity too, as Derby actually had, up until the 50s, some great old Victorian arcades. But the council flattened them and replaced them with anonymous shopping centres and whatnot, which was a crime. Now there's only Sadlergate and Irongate left that are the least bit attractive. The rest of the city centre is dullsville.
It's a real pity too, as Derby actually had, up until the 50s, some great old Victorian arcades. But the council flattened them and replaced them with anonymous shopping centres and whatnot, which was a crime. Now there's only Sadlergate and Irongate left that are the least bit attractive. The rest of the city centre is dullsville.
Jeff K wrote:Nick's still the man! No one has been as consistent as he has been over such a long period of time.
Re: UK cities
I voted Manchester, Glasgow, and Newcastle. All for similar reasons, actually - friendly people, a bit of grit, a 'feel' you get when you're there. Good shops, too.
I've never been to Leeds. England's third city, apparently. Any good?
I've never been to Leeds. England's third city, apparently. Any good?
Re: UK cities
The Idiot wrote:
It's a real pity too, as Derby actually had, up until the 50s, some great old Victorian arcades. But the council flattened them and replaced them with anonymous shopping centres and whatnot, which was a crime. Now there's only Sadlergate and Irongate left that are the least bit attractive. The rest of the city centre is dullsville.
It's an absolute disgrace the way Britain's towns and cities were destroyed by venal developers. We'd have lots of lovely towns and cities to live in if that hadn't happened. As it is the ones that have remained relatively untouched are now prohibitively expensive for most people.
- Zilth Pilchards
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Re: UK cities
The Idiot wrote:Yeah, Brum is just... meh.
It doesn't deserve to be England's second city,as much as Manchester is over hyped,most people might think think it has more of a claim than that shithole.
- bhoywonder
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Re: UK cities
Bristol is bloody marvellous. Arguably more history than anywhere outside London (the modern world was essentially built from here), it's slap bang in the middle of spectacular countryside, which you can be walking in within 10 minutes from the city centre, the music scene is fantastic, there's gigs every night, great theatre, great galleries, great shopping, great open spaces and there's a different festival in the city every weekend in the summer.
Almost everywhere else I know, people moan about where they live. In Bristol people just rave about the place.
Almost everywhere else I know, people moan about where they live. In Bristol people just rave about the place.
- Insouciant Western People
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Re: UK cities
Sir John Coan wrote:I've never been to Leeds. England's third city, apparently. Any good?
Bakc in the mid-90s I spent a fair bit of time there, as I was dating a lass who was at Leeds University. There was a fair bit of investment going into the city around that time, and it had smartened up a fair bit, I liked it. Couple of decent music venues - I saw Supergrass and Leftfield at the Town & Country around that time, and those were both brilliant gigs.
I spent a lot of time around Headingley too, as she lived out there. That was a pretty nice place, for a student area.
Jeff K wrote:Nick's still the man! No one has been as consistent as he has been over such a long period of time.
- dang65
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Re: UK cities
I've been to all of the listed cities, which is a start I suppose, but I've only lived in Bristol and Manchester. When I left Bristol at 17 I despised the place, but I now realise that many UK cities were like that back then - basically decrepit. And most of them have recovered from that so that the only decrepit bits are quite nostalgic now - the red brick chimneys with trees growing out of them; rusty railway sidings; derelict mills and factories; bomb sites; grim concrete estates - everywhere was like that and now they only remain in occasional places and are interesting instead of depressing.
In the end, I find it impossible to answer this question as I simply don't have my heart in any city other than London.
In the end, I find it impossible to answer this question as I simply don't have my heart in any city other than London.
- bhoywonder
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Re: UK cities
dang65 wrote:I've been to all of the listed cities, which is a start I suppose, but I've only lived in Bristol and Manchester. When I left Bristol at 17 I despised the place, but I now realise that many UK cities were like that back then - basically decrepit. And most of them have recovered from that so that the only decrepit bits are quite nostalgic now - the red brick chimneys with trees growing out of them; rusty railway sidings; derelict mills and factories; bomb sites; grim concrete estates - everywhere was like that and now they only remain in occasional places and are interesting instead of depressing.
In the end, I find it impossible to answer this question as I simply don't have my heart in any city other than London.
When I lived in Bristol 20 years ago it was a very different place. Not sure you'd even recognise half the place today.
- Footy
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Re: UK cities
Manchester.
In my youth, my mate's oldest brother lived there and we went and stayed with him on numerous occasions. It gave me a taste for the North and made me want to live there. It had an atmosphere that was palpably yet inexplicably different from what we knew in London. It seemed to rain continuously and the whole place was being dug up as part of early 70s regeneration. Even though it was unattractive, it succeeded in filling my head with all sorts of romantic notions about the North of England.
I had a long professional link to the city with it being a significant fashion and textile centre.
Newcastle.
I net my future wife, a Geordie, when she was working in Romford. I was still full of the idea of moving to Manchester but a few trips to Newcastle soon convinced me that the North East was a preferable choice to the North West. Newcastle was smaller but more attractive (despite being dug up, too, with the Metro and Eldon Square being built at the time). It was vibrant and the people were great. I engineered a move there through work and managed a store in the then brand new Eldon Square for six years.
Edinburgh.
Just a gorgeous city.
In my youth, my mate's oldest brother lived there and we went and stayed with him on numerous occasions. It gave me a taste for the North and made me want to live there. It had an atmosphere that was palpably yet inexplicably different from what we knew in London. It seemed to rain continuously and the whole place was being dug up as part of early 70s regeneration. Even though it was unattractive, it succeeded in filling my head with all sorts of romantic notions about the North of England.
I had a long professional link to the city with it being a significant fashion and textile centre.
Newcastle.
I net my future wife, a Geordie, when she was working in Romford. I was still full of the idea of moving to Manchester but a few trips to Newcastle soon convinced me that the North East was a preferable choice to the North West. Newcastle was smaller but more attractive (despite being dug up, too, with the Metro and Eldon Square being built at the time). It was vibrant and the people were great. I engineered a move there through work and managed a store in the then brand new Eldon Square for six years.
Edinburgh.
Just a gorgeous city.
Grab your coat sweetheart....I've got a knife.
Re: UK cities
bhoywonder wrote:Almost everywhere else I know, people moan about where they live. In Bristol people just rave about the place.
Southern wankers.
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- Poptastic
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Re: UK cities
I am a big fan of Plymouth. Sensational views over the Sound, proper city amenities, and Dartmoor on your doostep. The retail centre (developed in the fifties after the city took a pasting in the Second World War) is a bit dated, and there are no bars or restaurants in it, so it is empty in the evening, which is a shame. But Sutton Harbour is magnificent.
I kept thinking "swim as far as you can, swim as far as you can".
Re: UK cities
bhoywonder wrote:Bristol is bloody marvellous. Arguably more history than anywhere outside London (the modern world was essentially built from here), it's slap bang in the middle of spectacular countryside, which you can be walking in within 10 minutes from the city centre, the music scene is fantastic, there's gigs every night, great theatre, great galleries, great shopping, great open spaces and there's a different festival in the city every weekend in the summer.
Almost everywhere else I know, people moan about where they live. In Bristol people just rave about the place.
Bristol has always appealed to me, though I've never been. But it's expensive isn't it?
- trans-chigley express
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Re: UK cities
Zilth Pilchards wrote:The Idiot wrote:Yeah, Brum is just... meh.
It doesn't deserve to be England's second city,as much as Manchester is over hyped,most people might think think it has more of a claim than that shithole.
I prefer Brum to Manchester.
Never been to Leeds or Glasgow but the rest I know and Manchester comes bottom.
- bhoywonder
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Re: UK cities
TopCat G wrote:bhoywonder wrote:Bristol is bloody marvellous. Arguably more history than anywhere outside London (the modern world was essentially built from here), it's slap bang in the middle of spectacular countryside, which you can be walking in within 10 minutes from the city centre, the music scene is fantastic, there's gigs every night, great theatre, great galleries, great shopping, great open spaces and there's a different festival in the city every weekend in the summer.
Almost everywhere else I know, people moan about where they live. In Bristol people just rave about the place.
Bristol has always appealed to me, though I've never been. But it's expensive isn't it?
Certainly not compared to London. I expect it's expensive compared to Leeds, but then, it would be, wouldn't it? I don't find it especially expensive though.
Re: UK cities
I'm surprised Newcastle's so popular.
Admittedly I've never been, So I'm going on rather negative impressions here. But I always imagine it to be really cold with fierce winds. Then you have the whole pissed fat birds stumbling around the Bigg Market flashing their tits. It seems to lack class.
I voted Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow btw.
Admittedly I've never been, So I'm going on rather negative impressions here. But I always imagine it to be really cold with fierce winds. Then you have the whole pissed fat birds stumbling around the Bigg Market flashing their tits. It seems to lack class.
I voted Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow btw.