Whatever makes you feel better, but you're wrong.
Huh? St. Louis had 2.5 million back in 1985. Here are the numbers today, according to the United States Census Bureau:
2005 U.S. Census numbers/rankings
18 St. Louis, MO-IL MSA 2,802,450 2,698,687 103,763 3.8%
19 Baltimore-Towson, MD MSA 2,655,675 2,552,994 102,681 4.0%
20 Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL MSA 2,647,658 2,395,997 251,661 10.5%
21 Pittsburgh, PA MSA 2,386,074 2,431,087 -45,013 -1.9%
22 Denver-Aurora, CO MSA 2,359,994 2,157,756 202,238 9.4%
23 Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH MSA 2,126,318 2,148,143 -21,825 -1.0%
24 Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA MSA 2,095,861 1,927,881 167,980 8.7%
25 Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN MSA 2,070,441 2,009,632 60,809 3.0%
26 Sacramento--Arden-Arcade--Roseville, CA MSA 2,042,283 1,796,857 245,426 13.7%
27 Kansas City, MO-KS MSA 1,947,694 1,836,038 111,656 6.1%
Great. Well at least KC's MSA is growing much faster than yours. I can tell by living here and looking at all the construction around. By 2025, I bet our MSA will surpass yours in population.
Uhhh...okeeee. The MAX is a bus. A bus. It's not rapid transit, and it sucks compared to MetroLink.
The MAX is fine. Our taxpayers would rather have a much better arena and wait a few minutes.
Bullsh*t. KC is not a big enough market to support that many major league sports. And exactly how do you know that you will get those teams? Oh yeah, you don't. I wouldn't hold my breath.
You are an idiot. KC has a large MSA-- it has 2 million people (according to the 2005 census estimate). Plus it's growing fast. And we have a brand new arena that many teams would like to play in. We are a perfect city to host a major league basketball or hockey team. We had them before, earlier in the 70's and 80's when we were smaller but lost them because of a lack of support of fans (which isn't going to be a factor now with our larger population and awsome new arena and revitalized downtown). Plus, according to the wikipedia entries on both cities, we have the same number of major leauge sport teams already. Saint Louis lacks a major leauge soccer team (which we have-- the Kansas City Wizards), and we lack a major league hockey team (which you have-- the Saint Louis Blues).
They say ignorance is bliss, and they're right. You're living in a bubble, man. Best Universities according to
US News & World Report:
[eliminated list to shorten quote]
Go ahead and tell yourself that UMKC is "sufficient." What about more than sufficient? KC can't compete. Wash. U. is one of the best schools in the country like it or not. UMSL and UMKC are mediocre commuter schools at best. Saint Louis University and Webster U. are also reputable, both in STL.
Many cities in the country that are better than Saint Louis and Kansas City both lack good colleges. Houston, Detroit, Minneapolis, Denver all lack "great" colleges. Those are usually in the old cities-- and Saint Louis is one of them. So what? You have a good college-- many big cities lack good colleges.
Any true urbanite can appreciate the value of urban parks. You sound really stupid dismissing it. And you're right, KC has the Plaza, St. Louis doesn't. But St. Louis has plenty of other places where suburban soccer moms shop, they just tend to be indoors. That's all the Plaza really is-- an outdoor mall for suburban soccer moms.
You again, are an idiot. The plaza is one of the most unique places in the world. It is a collection of hundreds of high-end shops and restaurants all concentrated a single area, sorrounded by beautiful spanish architecture that you will find nowhere else in the world but spain and high-rise apartments, hotels, and some mansions on the outskirts of the plaza (not part of downtown). Nothing in Saint Louis even COMPARES to the plaza. And rich, sophistocated people shop there, not "soccer moms" (although there are several rich women bitches that shop there all day- lol). Anyways, Malls do not have the upscale shops like the plaza does, nor the beautiful and unique architecture like the plaza. Nothing, and I repeat, NOTHING in saint louis even compares. Mabye a mall is a great place for your poor people (which saint louis has a lot of), but it's nothing like the plaza. The plaza is not an "outdoor" mall-- it is way more. It is an upscale SHOPPING DISTRICT with a unique atmosphere and architecture (which combines Spanish and modern architecture [modern being the high rises around it]) found nowhere else in the world.
And all this talk about skylines is really old. Tall buildings don't make a city great. KC has a better skyline than Washington, DC too. Is KC a greater city? hmmmm.... As I said before, KC favorably compares to places like Columbus and Indianapolis, but not to Saint Louis.
First off, Kansas City lacks one thing that Saint Louis has. The largest craphole GETTHO in the enitre TRI STATE AREA- EAST SAINT LOUIS!!! Poor people actually constitute alot of your MSA's population. Also, Kansas City's average income is higher than that of Saint Louis citizens.
Secondly, the skyline is the "defining" picture of an American city. True, this is nt the same in Europe (because their cities have defining landmarks and unique architecture) or cities in the US with defining landmarks. But the High-Rises are the "unique" architecture that American Cities have. In the US the skyline is the picture of your city. If you have an ugly picture, (like Saint Louis), that leaves a bad impression on visitors and tourists. When someone thinks of Saint Louis, they probably think of the arch sorrounded by the (few) tall buildings around it. When you think of Kansas City you think of either barbecue, the plaza, or OUR tall (much better, according to http://homepages.ipact.nl/~egram/skyline2.html) skyline. The same goes for every other major american city (except Washington DC which has the capital). If you go to google and type in Kansas City, Saint Louis, Detroit, Houston, Boston, New York (especially new york), or any other major city in the US you will probably get alot of pictures of the skyline. Why? Because it's the defining picture of your city. It is a very important aspect of a city because the downtown is the "anchor" of a MSA. If someone around the world looks at your skyline, that will leave an impression of your city. It is an important WOW factor of a city.