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#3 |
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Maciamo
It seems to be very difficult someone finds objective criteria by which cities could be the appropriate measure. But it is not impossible to clearly define such criteria. Also, it is difficult to compare a city of 300,000 inhabitants and 3000000. So it might be better to make certain categories, probably would be at the top as a criterion for the category: number of population. I visited some of these cities and personally the biggest impression on me has left Berlin, (I speak from the point of choice for life), but since I will travel more around the Mediterranean next years, so probably will highly valued some Mediterranean city from the list. |
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#4 |
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Mercer has released its 2011 city ranking for Quality of Living.
1) Vienna 2) Zurich 3 Auckland 4) Munich 5) Düsseldorf -) Vancouver 7) Frankfurt 8) Geneva 9) Bern -) Copenhagen 11) Sydney 12) Amsterdam 13) Wellington 14) Ottawa 15) Toronto 16) Hamburg 17) Berlin 18) Melbourne 19) Luxembourg 20) Stockholm Here is the top 20 for the EU : 1) Vienna 2) Munich 3 Düsseldorf 4) Frankfurt 5) Copenhagen 6) Amsterdam 7) Hamburg 8) Berlin 9) Luxembourg 10) Stockholm 11) Brussels 12) Nuremberg 13) Dublin 14) Stuttgart 15) Paris 16) Oslo 17) Helsinki 18) London 19) Lyon 20) Barcelona There hasn't been so much change since I started this thread 4 years ago. Interestingly not a single US city made it to the world top 20, while Canadian cities rank quite high. The first city in the USA is Honolulu, Hawaii. Having been there, it only confirms what I wrote above about the poor choice of criteria to determine the quality of living. Honolulu wouldn't rank in my top 500 of cities where I wished to live. It's extremely remote from everything, rather boring (in every respects: culture, activities, climate...), doesn't have much history, and the food is among the worst I have had on this planet. Oahu feels like a place of forced exile to me (a bit like Napoleon in St Helena). |
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Interestingly not a single US city made it to the world top 20, while Canadian cities rank quite high. The first city in the USA is Honolulu, Hawaii. Having been there, it only confirms what I wrote above about the poor choice of criteria to determine the quality of living. Honolulu wouldn't rank in my top 500 of cities where I wished to live. It's extremely remote from everything, rather boring (in every respects: culture, activities, climate...), doesn't have much history, and the food is among the worst I have had on this planet. Oahu feels like a place of forced exile to me (a bit like Napoleon in St Helena). Your objections do highlight a problem with these sorts of studies, though. You'd likely be miserable in Honolulu, and thereby have a lower quality of life there than in places ranked below it. So I prefer "where should you live?"-type quizzes better than these sorts of surveys that pretend to be objective. |
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