lightweight champion
Banned
- 13,481
- 5,271
Woodland is about 10 min north of Davis and like half the price.UC Davis. Quality of the public schools. Deep community involvement. People paying extra for these things lol.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Woodland is about 10 min north of Davis and like half the price.UC Davis. Quality of the public schools. Deep community involvement. People paying extra for these things lol.
Same thing happened to SF. It drew the best, brightest and hardest working people in the country....sometimes at the expense of the people currently there. I think the end result of progress and a better Bay Area is worth it (to me).
Don't play coy pimpin. It IS at the expense of people, particularly black and brown folk. Own up to it.
Woodland is about 10 min north of Davis and like half the price.
Where are people in SF who are being displaced going?
Where are people in SF who are being displaced going?
My dad and bro both ended up in Concord and my mom might go to Vallejo or Richmond. If I ever leave the city, I'll probably move to San Leandro or somewhere around El Cerrito/Albany.
Albany is underrated. It's pretty much an extension of Berkeley to me. I wouldn't mind living there at all if most of my friends and family weren't in the South Bay, which is why I live in the Peninsula as kind of a halfway point between everything
Type of broads you find in Richmond now
Albany is underrated. It's pretty much an extension of Berkeley to me
Where are people in SF who are being displaced going?
Albany is calm as hell for a being a city between San Pablo and Berkeley. I love it and miss that whole area, even Richmond. El Cerrito is an Albany and San Pablo hybrid.
When did this happen? I still go to parts of Richmond and I still only see black, hispanic, and asians.
Albany is mad small. Sort of like Kensington above El Cerrito area. Kind of odd that they are even cities amongst the major cities.
I don't speak for everyone but for the native folks from my wife's circle of friends, over 50% of them live at home still at age 32 and just stacking money but knowing in the future the house they live in will get passed down to them. Granted the catch is they have to live their till their folks die but all of them are Chinese and they find this pretty normal. The other 50% are renting it out in SF, Oakland, Daly City, etc. Hardly anyone is in a position to own and also most of these people I speak of are still single.
The hardest part of these things is when you want to have kids. That is when certain cities just don't make sense if you are a nut bag like my wife is with schooling systems. East Bay school systems are just not comparable to her SF schools (specifically Lowell) that she went to.
Albany is mad small. Sort of like Kensington above El Cerrito area. Kind of odd that they are even cities amongst the major cities.
Haha. I think he's talking about the Richmond District in SF. Used to be predominately Chinese but now it's blended with whites.
Yeah, a lot of middle-aged people I work with surprised the **** out of me when they said they only go to Berkeley or Marin for outdoor ****. I kind of like it though, so they can stay the hell out of areas that still feel familiar.Bay Area "cities" are just weird in general. If you think about, they're more like districts/regions than actual cities. I think that's why people that move here don't think there's anything worthy outside of SF, when in reality the entire Bay Area is the size of a major city, while SF is the size of small/midsize city.
For example, when my girlfriend moved here from Indonesia, she thought San Jose, Oakland, San Mateo, Fremont, etc. were very far and different from each other, but then when she got a hang of the area, she compared it to "Ok, SF is like North Jakarta, while San Jose is South Jakarta (those two areas are about 45 mins-1 hour away from each other)"