Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Vanderbilt, Rice, Dartmouth, Brown, WashU
WashU is not city adjacent at all. It has a beautiful campus in the suburbs of St. Louis. A good 9 miles by car. I think there is public transportation available to get into the city but it is not located in a city.
OP asked for walkable to a “neighborhood” which WashU is to all of the West End. Even Delmar Loop which is hipster central is less than a mile so a longish walk or a short Uber.
DTStL is not exactly an evening destination anyway. Unless there is a Cardinals game it’s dead after 6 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone recommend schools that have settings similar to Gtown? A school of 4000 to 15000 undergrads with a real campus within walking distance of a neighborhood that has a lot going on in a major or semi major city? I’m not worried about the ranking and whether DC can be competitive, I just need as a baseline schools that I can investigate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Vanderbilt, Rice, Dartmouth, Brown, WashU
Unfortunately Emory is not walkable to anything. Georgia Tech is in a more walkable part of Atlanta. But the city overall isn’t really a walking city. This was disappointing when we visited.
The type of student body, and where it is in relation to the rest of Atlanta, make it similar. Also, the Georgetown neighborhood is walkable but getting there from the school is a trek, crossing busy roads and bridges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atlanta is not a walking or public transportation city the way DC and Boston and Chicago are. It’s lack of a cohesive center or truly distinct neighborhoods is frustrating for a lot of people who’ve lived in other major cities.
Yes, I hate it for that reason. You need a car and basically have to drive everywhere, often in terrible traffic.
My DC is at Emory. I agree, I hate Atlanta traffic, but I hate DC traffic as well and haven't left here! My DC walks into Emory village daily. Has restaurants, liquor store, CVS, bank, dry cleaner, etc. Everything a college student needs. My DC loves the neighborhood around school with parks and trails. My DC spends a lot of time in downtown Atlanta, Buckhead, Decatur. All are a 10-15 minute uber (fete?) ride.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago, Rice, Case Western. Not wash U, Richmond, Rochester. The last 3 are surprisingly isolated from the cities they are in.
Emory is in between. There’s BU, but that’s very urban. More than Gtown. Northeastern might fit the bill.
Chicago is not ideal in the sense that it takes some effort to get to the part of the city students would want to explore. Might as well go to Northwestern.
Anonymous wrote:Holy Cross and Villanova
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atlanta is not a walking or public transportation city the way DC and Boston and Chicago are. It’s lack of a cohesive center or truly distinct neighborhoods is frustrating for a lot of people who’ve lived in other major cities.
Yes, I hate it for that reason. You need a car and basically have to drive everywhere, often in terrible traffic.
Anonymous wrote:Atlanta is not a walking or public transportation city the way DC and Boston and Chicago are. It’s lack of a cohesive center or truly distinct neighborhoods is frustrating for a lot of people who’ve lived in other major cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Vanderbilt, Rice, Dartmouth, Brown, WashU
WashU is not city adjacent at all. It has a beautiful campus in the suburbs of St. Louis. A good 9 miles by car. I think there is public transportation available to get into the city but it is not located in a city.
OP asked for walkable to a “neighborhood” which WashU is to all of the West End. Even Delmar Loop which is hipster central is less than a mile so a longish walk or a short Uber.
DTStL is not exactly an evening destination anyway. Unless there is a Cardinals game it’s dead after 6 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Vanderbilt, Rice, Dartmouth, Brown, WashU
WashU is not city adjacent at all. It has a beautiful campus in the suburbs of St. Louis. A good 9 miles by car. I think there is public transportation available to get into the city but it is not located in a city.