MSN.com announces The 10 Best Neighborhoods to live in for 2011
Did your neighborhood make the list?
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Highland Park, Birmingham, Ala. The neighborhood was chosen for its public spaces, location, mix of land uses and diversity of housing. “We have everything from apartments that are $400 a month to $1 million houses,” Alison Glascock, president of the Highland Park Neighborhood Association, said in The Birmingham News.
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Northbrae, Berkeley, Calif. The APA noted the views of San Francisco Bay, plus Northbrae’s “garden suburb design with streets and footpaths that follow the contour of the hills.” “In some neighborhoods, people come home and all you see is their garage door close,” Jeff Dutton, who has lived in the neighborhood 40 years, told The Daily Californian. “I take the time to talk. It’s friendly.”
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Ansley Park, Atlanta. The 275-acre neighborhood was designed so no home is more than a 10-minute walk from one of the 14 parks.
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Pullman, Chicago. The development was built more than 100 years ago by George Pullman, the railroad-car maker, for the company’s workers. “When you are in Pullman, you know it,” Michael Shymanski, president of the Historic Pullman Foundation, told the Chicago Tribune. “It has a very strong sense of place, and the architecture and design helps reinforce the sense of place.”
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Gold Coast and Hamburg Historic District, Davenport, Iowa. The homes were built in the late 1800s overlooking the Mississippi River. The neighborhood had fallen into disrepair but has been brought back in recent decades through the work of its residents. The award shows “what a few people with a vision can accomplish,” Bill Boom, the alderman who represents the area, told The Quad City Times.
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Hattiesburg Historic Neighborhood, Hattiesburg, Miss. “Everyone is their brother’s keepers,” Red Bailey, a former Hattiesburg City Councilman, told the Hattiesburg American. “The neighborhood was built on that type of foundation.”
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Dundee Memorial Park, Omaha, Neb. This neighborhood was an early suburb, built at the end of a streetcar line.
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German Village, Columbus, Ohio. Neighborhood of brick streets and homes from the mid-1800s.
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Swan Lake, Tulsa, Okla. This area, where most of the homes were built in the 1920s and 1930s, is popular because of the diversity of its homes and its convenience. “It’s walkable, very diverse,” said Swan Lake resident Jim Turner, a member of the Tulsa Preservation Commission, in the Tulsa World. “There’s a wide range of housing values, wide range of architecture.”
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College Hill, Providence, R.I. This historic neighborhood near Brown University dates to the 1600s. Preservationists saved the area from demolition in the 1950s.