What is the best destination in the US for historical American architecture? I visited Boston last year with hopes that the whole town would feel historical like a small European town, only to find it's just another modern hellhole with a couple pockets of history in it.
What is the best destination in the US for historical American architecture...
Philadelphia maybe? They got that bell and a rocky statue if you don’t mind being surrounded by nig.
>Philadelphia maybe? They got that bell
Look at google streetview where that bell is. It's fascinating. It gives you at one simple glance the difference in US city planning.
Same for the city hall of Philadelphia: A great building. Very American, but it's surrounding is totally drowning it. It's all alone and abandoned inbetween skyscrapers.
Boston was turned into a carbon copy of every other modern American city long time ago. Sad, because (along with Quebec), it was probably the most European city in North America.
Unironically New "York"
Washington DC
well preserved row houses
Washington DC and Philadelphia have some preserved sections.
Quebec City is the only true European style walled city in North America, in case you didn't know
Montreal has a tiny little old town, too
Very cool
Detroit perfectly reflects american culture in general
Nantucket is preserved
what the fuck is 'american architecture'?
most of the New England islands are quaint, as is Cape Cod
If you're fond of sand dunes and salty air
Quaint little villages here and there
You're sure to fall in love with old cape cod
>Eclectic pseudo european garbage
checked
That picture gives me a freedomboner
it looks nice at night next to the mountains
Charleston
fucking clarity slider cunts
>new orleans
i dont know exactly why but i love this type of "little towns". the comfy feels i guess...
is the only thing that makes me want to visit the US.
We need more like this in the new world
You went to a major city to feel like a small European town?
What the hell were you thinking?
Maybe if you went 10-15 miles outside of downtown Boston, you might have found what you are looking for.
>Charleston
Which Floridian city has architecture that resembles European architecture the most?
Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia .
St. Augustine is the oldest settlement in North America, so it's about the only really European style historical place in Florida. Suburbs of Miami and Palm Beach will look Spanish, too.
St. Augustine is the oldest city in America, founded in the 1500s. It has those tiny little streets you see in European cities
You won’t find much in the way of intact pre-car city planning, but you can still find some nice architecture in most American cities. I’ll post some I have from NYC.
car culture still defines Florida no matter where you are unless you're on Key West. but still, there are some European style town squares that some towns are built around
>Genesee Country Village & Museum upstate new york
Unfortunately that's what US cities are like now. Historical buildings and monuments surrounded by boxes of steel and glass, eyesores from the state-subsidized modern art era, topped off with a plethora of niggers.
How often does one see a wild negro from Jacksonville to appear in there?
probably very often, lots of niggers in Florida
redpill on st. aug: they cleaned out their ghetto (lincolnville) down to about 2-3 streets and a catholic bum hut, in favor of the Flagler students' families buying up, renovating and renting out the negropolis. Rent is atrocious, the surroundings are luxurious and will soon no longer be for the common man to experience. Enjoy this place while you can, it's going to be a five star resort town.
My asshole
This building is actually made up of old buildings brought over from Europe so you can’t get much more European.
wash dc.just got wade thru seas of niggers to see all of it.
Wew. Might as well post the view from the Cloisters. It’s really nice on a good day.
Looks like England. Then again, Princeton was a colonial university.
hey nice timing!
East coast. Every major city has an old town and historically preserved architecture
most nice colleges have traditional European campuses with masonry buildings and quadrangles
Southern cities like Savannah and Charleston are the only cities that give a shit about preserving their heritage.
Sadly can’t find an hd pic from this angle.
Philly
Charleston
DC
Lots of places in New England probably
well fuck me, that's it for that retirement plan then.
Any other southern state I should move in with ocean beach and hottie Latinas?
San Antonio
been there.that hotel in banff kicks ass.suits of armor in banquet rooms.
Charleston, South Carolina or Savannah, Georgia
>USA
>historical
I've got some bad news for you, kiddo. The USA has no history
No history, no culture, no class
Well, far enough south, the niggers are less in number. So Miami and that area. still gonna be niggers in every part of the south. Maybe not Myrtle Island and Hilton Head and stuff, but no latinas there.
The Carolinas. Pretty much every beach town along the coast is all white. Don’t know if that’ll be the case in 30-40 years though unfortunately
true, i lived in savannah for almost a decade. the only problem with it is all the blacks causing crime.
There is no such thing as historical American architecture. America has always been about building cheap and shitty unaesthetic houses out of sticks and random garbage found lying around.
Yeah i highly recommend QC. Was a great place to visit.
Wilmington? is gon get blakked
nice historical literacy
This