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by pentamassiv 1044 days ago
I would say it depends or is negative. I don't live in the US but here in the german alps, most towns/cities are not on top of the mountain. They are wedged between the mountains. In my city that means the sun is setting at 1 pm in the winter because it gets blocked by mountains. I had no idea about this before moving here but I have to say it gets annoying. There is also a city close by that has the highest suicide rate in Germany. They get even less sun in the winter because the surrounding mountains are higher.
1 comments

The US is generally at significantly lower latitude than Germany and other mountainous areas in Europe. This means that for large parts of the high altitude areas, seasonal variation in day length is much less than in Europe.

Also, because urban environments in the US west are relatively new, they tend not be found "between mountains" in the same way that the centuries old cities across the Alps etc. are. The large population centers (Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque) are built in large, open flat areas, and many of the midsize cities are not really surrounded by mountains in the way that equivalent European or other non-American cities often are.