College Towns Are Awesome, and These Are the 10 Best

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Published 2023-11-01
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Are college towns annoying or amazing? Well, they tend to be some of the most walkable, bikeable, and transit-able cities in the US, so...just get over it.

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Previous CityNerd Videos Referenced:
- Top 10 Urbanist Universities:    • 10 Best Universities for Urbanism In ...  
- The Lost World of US Passenger Rail:    • The Sad and Awful Way We Destroyed th...  
- Simulated Urbanism:    • In Search of Car-Free America: Why Wa...  
- Affordable Small Cities with Great Urbanism:    • Is "Small City Urbanism" an Oxymoron?...  
- Small Cities with Great Transit:    • Smaller Cities With Great Transit: 10...  

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Resources:
- Census data: data.census.gov/table?q=s0801
- Walk Score data: www.walkscore.com/
- www.rtd-denver.com/services/flatiron-flyer
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis,_California
- www.capitolcorridor.org/route-map/
- www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-03-02/how-did…
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford,_Mississippi
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Reb

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Images
- Auburn fan from Flickr user Auburn Alumni Association, www.flickr.com/photos/auburnalumniassociation/8134… creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
- Amtrak System Map www.amtrak.com/content/dam/projects/dotcom/english…
- Ben & Jerrys By Steve Morgan - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=27461689
- Phish by Flickr User Chris Tank www.flickr.com/photos/ctankcycles/5162777955 creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/
- Burlington Church Street By Beyond My Ken - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29108192 , commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29106959
- Disney Main Street USA By Michael Gray from Wantagh NY, USA - Main Street During Day Magic Kingdom Panorama 2009, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36956506

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All Comments (21)
  • @CityNerd
    Did you really just scroll down to look at comments? That's just...inadvisable. Well except for this pinned comment, which reminds you that you can sign up for the amazing creator-owned streaming service, Nebula, using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: go.nebula.tv/citynerd
  • @Geswert72
    I love how everyone agrees college is the best time of their lives and college towns are great, but we make 0 effort to make the rest of society more like it (walkable, diverse, subsidized food and healthcare, plenty of outdoor common areas) Also LFG both my alma maters on this list
  • @toofbrown6335
    What ruined Oxford, Mississippi in your data is ironically the thiing you suggest people might do: move there. Oxford has become such an attraction for retirees that it consists of so many car dependent developments that it overwhelms the campus and original town square. The pre-1980s part of town is nicely walkable. Oh and they got rid of Colonel Reb about 13 years ago.
  • @AaronSmith-sx4ez
    The problem in general with college towns is housing. Anything within walking distance of the campus, will either be likely rundown, crowded, and noisy...or if nice it will be extremely expensive. Sure you can live further away from campus, but in most cases you then leave the more interesting parts of town and enter generic suburbs. Almost every single city on this top ten list has serious problems with housing/affordability.
  • @mikemcgrew8163
    I recall driving my car to State College as a sophomore in January and parking it in a snow-covered lot. I didn't use it for two months because I walked everywhere or used the surprisingly comprehensive bus service CATA to go to the slopes, parties, grocery shopping, whatever. When I returned to my car I found I had been parked in a fire lane and had a pile of tickets. Oops.
  • @Mogswamp
    Unfortunately I didn't get to watch the whole video because I blacked out from excitement when you mentioned Amherst. When I regained consciousness you brought up Burlington and I passed out again. Great watch nonetheless, I will send you the medical bill.
  • @rrrooorrr
    Having lived in 3 of the cities listed, I was shocked to see my favorite college city not listed, Madison! I'm not sure if it failed some of the early qualifications, but talk about a unique city, situated on the isthmus between two large lakes. There are bike paths everywhere and great walkability. Amazing restaurant scene, sense of identity, access to parks and wooded areas. In general I found that people who move there for school or work tend to stay there. I might be slightly biased though after living here and listening to the experiences of city planner plays(city planner in Madison). Regardless great video!
  • @another_jt
    The addition of rail connections as a criteria really hurt Midwest college towns in this ranking. You pointed out Iowa City and it's lack of passenger rail, and the same generally holds true for just about every other college-centered town in the center of the country.
  • "Americans only love the college experience because it's the only time in their lives they live in walkable communities." - A very viral tweet that got half a million likes on Twitter.
  • @the_sludge0
    I'm so glad Corvallis made it on the list! While the separated infrastructure is not really there, one of the biggest things I've noticed is that drivers actually pay attention to bikes on the road (yielding on a right turn, giving extra space when possible, etc). And newer road work is often reducing lane widths and adding buffered bike lanes, which is always a great thing to see.
  • @RogerMillerInVA
    Actually, my college town, Fort Collins, Colorado (Colorado State) IS like living in Disneyland. The Disney architect who built Main Street USA was a Fort Collins native. He designed Main Street in homage to Fort Collins' charming, all-American Old Town. The resemblances are amazing!
  • I am so pleased to see State College, PA as the #1 choice. I was a student at Penn State in the late 1980s-1990s. Fresh from divorce and a very poor mother of two young children, I couldn't afford a car. My little family had to rely on public transport/walking/biking to get around. And it worked! Kids to and from day care, going to classes, shopping, kid activities...the buses were so regular and the routes so well-planned that life was doable without a car.
  • @jaysullivan2045
    I am aware Madison, WI has less than a 25% student population, but it should have been an honorable! What a great small city - Transit mall, bike infrastructure, woven into the city!
  • @soastersoas5827
    I disagree that college towns are great. They're amazing while you're a student, but there's very few opportunities to work and live in them once you graduate. Plus, they're dead when students aren't there, which makes it hard for businesses to survive. Especially when it comes to grocery stores. My town is a college town and I live on main street, and the nearest one is 30 mins away. The mayor recognizes this problem but the school basically holds the town hostage by continually accepting new students, which means more housing is turned into student only housing, which makes it even harder to build anything for students once they graduate
  • @steveszigethy
    In tribute to Coach Knight (RIP), I just threw a chair due to the omission of Bloomington, Indiana, where I learned the virtues of car-free living as an undergrad.
  • @cashmsc
    It's probably been said before but I absolutely love how you detail your methodology. Really makes your videos feel intentional and truly helpful, and not like some arbitrary thing someone came up with because they felt like it.
  • @squireltag1000
    A video idea: What are some of the unique problems/solutions used by major cities that sit on state borders (ex. kansas city)
  • @DutyDuty
    One thing I miss about Boulder is that almost all the bike routes are grade separated from car traffic. I remember one exception near Broadway and Baseline, but I've never felt safer biking than in Boulder.
  • @flynngames4703
    Cheesecake Factory is unnatural. You shouldn’t be able to have that many items on a menu without being a buffet. Convinced it’s ran by aliens from Mars.