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[QUOTE="87Xfer, post: 3956111, member: 10566"] I agree with Burlington, VT. Portland, ME - it was a craphole when I lived in Maine as a youngster, but it's transformed (food, art, waterfront has been cleaned up) and I'd be very happy to live in the area now. Raleigh, NC - Had to start traveling there for a new client a few years back, and dreaded it. By the 2nd trip, I was looking forward to the next visit. Mmmmm, [URL='https://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/']Poole's Diner[/URL] Re: Flagstaff, it's a great place to visit. But there's one reason I'd never even consider living there ...wind. In the spring the wind is unbelievable and incessant. Seriously, it's enough to drive people insane. Or at least it would drive me insane. And while Sedona is one of the most beautiful landscapes anywhere, it's awful. It's like a micro-sized "upside down" version of LA. Just too damn weird, lots (and growing) look at me culture, and although you are in the middle of nowhere, you can sit in bumper to bumper traffic forever trying to go 4 miles across town. And my probably hugely unpopular vote: Providence. It's got universities, including Ivy League, which is a rare asset. GREAT food, and obvious cultural influence from all over the place - take the Portuguese influence, where else can you get authentic Portuguese food in addition to Linguica pizza all over the place? They've finally made better use of their riverfront. Close proximity to ocean, Boston, the Vineyard, Nantucket, hell, even Block Island. And [U]this is about most underrated, not best[/U]. Providence is often touted to be the dregs of the universe and it's actually not. [/QUOTE]
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