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Albany/Troy
Western ma (Northampton, Stockbridge, Lenox, amherst) Detroit St Petersburg FL Oxford MI And second Pittsburgh, Cincinnati |
Plus so many great restaurants! |
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Western MA is a great suggestion if small towns are a good fit (vs a city).
Richmond and Baltimore are also great suggestions. You are right - the real estate values probably won't = investment. But there is a very high quality of life in North Baltimore neighborhoods vis a vis cost of living. |
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Do you need a big city, or are college towns a potential fit? That opens up a whole another set of areas.
BTW: Chicago isn't that cheap, once you add in property taxes and stuff. we weren't that far off from DC cost comparing Cap Hill COL to Lincoln park COL... |
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Visual arts scene can mean many things:
Do you mean nice museums? Edgy galleries? Performance art? Film festivals? Richmond, VA Live in the Fan or Museum District VCU art school provides an ever changing art scene Good museums Theatre where most big musicals etc come through Quirky old housing, lower cost of living Very hot in summer Providence Live on the East Side RISD, world class art school Also Brown is there too Similar theatre options to Richmond Very similar old housing stick to Richmond, slightly older houses Housing costs higher Very cold winter, less brutal summer Better medical care accessible in Boston Cost wise Richmond is better Climate is a matter of personal preference |
LOL! Maybe in 2011. A 2 bed 1 bath teardown in Delaney Park is $440k. https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1620-Eola-Dr-Orlando-FL-32806/46034375_zpid/?mmlb=g,10 |
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Sorry, don't have time to read all the previous replies. Here are some options depending on what you prioritize. Some of these are more expensive than others (and obviously one can spend like a plutocrat in parts of Chicago, or even Minneapolis) but the point is there are also more affordable options to be had, in a way that just doesn't seem to be the case in much of DMV anymore.
walkable big cities with affordable COL and lots of culture: - Chicago - Philadelphia walkable (in parts - and bikeable and public transport) mid-sized cities with affordable COL but a little less culture: - Baltimore (not least for proximity to all DC offers including presumably your current friends) - Pittsburgh - Cleveland (incl E and W suburbs like Shaker Hts and Lakewood) - Columbus (incl Bexley) - Indianapolis - Minneapolis - Raleigh - Richmond - Portland ME - Tucson smaller/college cities with lower COL and a surprisingly lively cultural scene: - Greenville SC - Asheville NC - Burlington VT - Newburgh/Beacon NY - New Haven CT - Lincoln NE |
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Richmond
Denver |
In Providence, more people are living downtown, lots of new condos (and we are getting a trader Joe's, the people rejoice). West End is also an artsy option. |
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Lived in Providence awhile ago. Last I visited people were just starting to move downtown. Other than Johnson and Wales it was pretty desolate at night / weekend. Good to see that changing.
Also, Providence has a Nordstrom. Richmond Nordstrom has closed. |