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by davidw 6360 days ago
Well... other problems aside, SV has some things going for it that won't change, like climate and topography, that Detroit will never have.
2 comments

SV has some things going for it [...] topography, that Detroit will never have.

SV is a port area located next to a bay. Detroit is a port city located next to a river. How is SV's topography better than Detroit's?

The highest point in the entire state of Michigan is lower than the hills west of SV.
Flat topography would be an economic advantage, would it not?
Which is why Detroit is a thriving city, and hilly San Francisco is run down and derelict...? Maybe 100 years ago that was some kind of advantage, but not these days in the industries that SV relies on.
Maybe 100 years ago that was some kind of advantage

Interesting choice of date. 100 years ago SF was rebuilding from the giant earthquake that had leveled most of the city three years before.

So, yeah, Detroit's got certain topographical advantages. People just can't remember that, because essentially none of the current residents of the Bay Area were living there in 1906, and human memory is short. But there may come a day when you remember. It'll be one day after one third of the buildings fall down and the water taps stop working.

And now for the public service announcement: If you live in the Bay Area, stockpile some drinking water and bolt your shelves to the wall!

Seismography != Topography :-) They had a big earthquake in 1989, right? So it's not that old a memory in any case.
Detroit is a thriving city, and hilly San Francisco is run down

Actually, the opposite is true, and hilliness is not the only factor in play. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spurious_relationship

Hilliness is not an economic factor at all. Well, perhaps with the exception of some hill towns in central Italy that are still fairly inaccessible, I don't think it really matters in this day and age, in our industry, except for the fact that it makes a place more pleasant to live for many people, like me.

This is where I live now, and the economy isn't that bad:

http://www.welton.it/photos/innsbruck/innsbruck_panorama.htm...

Points to detroit for proximity to plentiful fresh water and arable land. SoCal is in a long term freshwater pickle, remember.
Exactly - even if the tech economy completely disappeared, people would still want to live there.