Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares about # of garages, are there any jobs in Minnesota?
Trade offs just like everything else in life.
Of course. The Twin Cities are a hub for the technology, medical, and finance industries. It is a very livable, stable, area. What a silly comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd consider it...except we're gov't types whose job opportunities are absolutely best here.
DC employs the unemployable and people with worthless degrees
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Huntsville, North Alabama. A flyover state, I know.
We have a great cost of living = income ratio, a city full of scientists and engineers, a bit of arts for our small city, great nature, rivers and parks, 200 sunny days a year, close drive to beaches, commute to work is averaging 15 minutes, real estate is cheap.
Not sure if meth labs counts as "scientists and engineers" but the rest sounds nice except the Alabama part.
Anonymous wrote:Lakeville is far from downtown and there is not much there. It's like living in Clarksburg or Urbana or Frederick. While you may not get a 4 car garage in this area that's because you don't typically need it here, while you do need to garage your car in the winter in MN.
Mpls and St Paul are beautiful cities, and there are some super nice houses especially near the lakes, or in Edina, or on Summit Ave, but those houses aren't $580k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Huntsville, North Alabama. A flyover state, I know.
We have a great cost of living = income ratio, a city full of scientists and engineers, a bit of arts for our small city, great nature, rivers and parks, 200 sunny days a year, close drive to beaches, commute to work is averaging 15 minutes, real estate is cheap.
Not sure if meth labs counts as "scientists and engineers" but the rest sounds nice except the Alabama part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Huntsville, North Alabama. A flyover state, I know.
We have a great cost of living = income ratio, a city full of scientists and engineers, a bit of arts for our small city, great nature, rivers and parks, 200 sunny days a year, close drive to beaches, commute to work is averaging 15 minutes, real estate is cheap.
Not sure if meth labs counts as "scientists and engineers" but the rest sounds nice except the Alabama part.
Anonymous wrote:I'd consider it...except we're gov't types whose job opportunities are absolutely best here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Huntsville, North Alabama. A flyover state, I know.
We have a great cost of living = income ratio, a city full of scientists and engineers, a bit of arts for our small city, great nature, rivers and parks, 200 sunny days a year, close drive to beaches, commute to work is averaging 15 minutes, real estate is cheap.
Not sure if meth labs counts as "scientists and engineers" but the rest sounds nice except the Alabama part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh good. A garage for each member of my family, two of whom are under 8.
Why the heck would anyone need 4 garages?
Uh, because you're u have 3-4 cars. Not sure why this is hard to understand. People do have multiple cars. Even her in DC
Anonymous wrote:Minnesotans need garages because the cars would freeze outside in winter and not start.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Huntsville, North Alabama. A flyover state, I know.
We have a great cost of living = income ratio, a city full of scientists and engineers, a bit of arts for our small city, great nature, rivers and parks, 200 sunny days a year, close drive to beaches, commute to work is averaging 15 minutes, real estate is cheap.