Ready to talk about Selling or Buying Process in Cincy? TEXT/CALL👉🏾 513-402-1295 email👉 vic@housesvic.com website 👉www.housesvic.com/ Book a time to speak 👇👇 calendly.com/housesvic/30min
Great comparison. I feel like you missed the nail with a few points on Columbus. I live in Cincinnati I love it! The rest of my family lives in Columbus. And I can say when I visit there’s a lot more things to do than people think. Columbus really is an underrated city. either way Ohio in general has the 3 c’s not many states have 3 major city’s like we do.
@@HousesByVic I know, it's just Columbus' culture is stale compared to Cincinnati & Cleveland. Lol! 😂 You know how Cleveland is influenced by the northeast and upper midwest and Cincinnati is influenced by the lower midwest and upper south, Columbus is a great city but it seems kinda bland culture wise. 💯
The effect of Intel, Google, and AWS moving to Columbus should be considered. These companies are bringing and estimated 40B dollar influx into the Columbus area. My home value has increased 15% because I live near where Intel is under construction. Intel will be the world's largest microchip producer when completed. They are bringing nearly 100 companies that are contracted with Intel. The influx of companies is causing a bump in home and property values and infrastructure. I think Cincinnati and Columbus are both great places to live. They do have a different feel because of their entertainment and geographies.
As someone who lived in Columbus for ten years and from Cincinnati, Columbus has never had a more bustling downtown than Cincinnati. Go downtown Columbus at 8pm it’s a ghost town. Go downtown Cincinnati at 8pm it’s just getting started.
Good video. As a Cincinnatian I’ve learned that metro population is a far better measure than city proper as a measure of true urban region size. In the 50s Columbus major Rhodes annexed it’s suburbs increasing the city size and artificially boosting population. don’t be fooled. Cincinnati was hemmed in by geography. But it’s area is in fact larger. If Dayton and Cincinnati merge metros or will be the largest overall section of the state, bringing attention to it. Need to talk to the ACS American community service about this to change rules on how to include Dayton-cincy in a metro
@@HousesByVic From what I have heard, Cincinnati would not want to be associated with Dayton. For years, the people there referred to Dayton as “Little Detroit”, due to the number of automotive manufacturing plants and related businesses that Dayton used to have. Those plants left Dayton, which has really harmed the local economy, thus the “Detroit” reference. Like a lot Great Lakes area cities, Dayton is still struggling with such losses and isn’t what it once was. I don’t know that Dayton would want to merge with Cincinnati, but even more so I think Cincinnati residents don’t want to be associated with Dayton. But it is also true that a lot of the area between the cities has seen a lot of development and is an attractive area to live.
I have lived in both Columbus and Cincinnati, and this my opinion. Cincinnati maybe smaller in population and physical area, it has a bigger Metro area. It has move influence over the surrounding communities. When I live in Cincinnati I actually lived in Butler country but considered it Cincinnati. I would regularly hang out with friends in Downtown Cincinnati or northern Kentucky and still considered it my area. In Columbus people on the northside stay on the northside, westside residents consider themselves westsiders and not from Columbus. Dublin, Hillard, Westville and Worthington are considered their own communities. Residents in the Columbus Metro Area tend to stay in the own click . Cincinnati's physical growth was always limited, they can not grow to the south because they are on a river. Cincinnati could not grow to the north because or Norwood. While Columbus has pretty much used water rights to expand in all areas of Franklin county and beyond.
When he talked about us having less colleges and I think that’s bc here osu is the college to go to or Columbus state our college culture is huge here for the only osu tho
You can defiantly survive in Cincinnati car free, as many residents rely on the Metro bus line. Thanks for the question, that is a topic i should have included
I've lived in Columbus for 48 years, and as long as you stay in Franklin county there is a reliable bus system. For the rest of the surrounding counties, you'll need a vehicle.
I don't know much about Cincinnati but Columbus is my mom's best friend is from? She drives back and forth to visit family sometimes. If I was to live in Ohio, it would be Columbus, Cleveland is too cold!
I've lived in both, Cincy hands down. Columbus has many positives, but it's essentially a giant incorporated suburb. Far less history and historic neighborhoods.
Yes, Columbus has annexed most of Franklin County, which is why they are the largest Ohio city-proper in population. But if you take in the entire Cleveland metro, then the Cleveland area has the most people. I personally have never thought that Cincinnati is a pretty city. Passing through on I-75, it is just not that attractive. I do gibe Cincinnati credit for the redevelopment of the Over-the-Rhine/Vine Street area, which used to be very sketchy.
They used to have similar economies and were competitive with each other. Cincinnati has struggled and stagnated and just can't compete with Columbus for jobs and investment the way it used to.
The Ohio State University is one of the highest ranked universities in the world(top 100). Sorry but having more universities doesn't give Cincinnati an advantage.
I wouldn’t say that Ohio has been a dominant Republican state for the last 40 years. The state voted for Obama twice. It was a solid swing/bellwether state up until the Trump era. One final note - there really are no blue and red states for the most part. It’s blue cities and red small towns/rural areas. Whether a state is red or blue mostly boils down to what percentage/ratio of the population lives in big cities and their suburbs and suburbs vs those living in rural areas/small towns.
im from Cincinnati lived in Columbus only positive is Columbus has less hills Columbus has new age shopping centers.. Cincinnati has more parks more culture
I guess west side of the city, which is a guetto that personally reminds me of West Oakland in California. Damn it seems like I cant run away from the west
I guess west side of the city, which is a guetto that personally reminds me of West Oakland in California. Damn it seems like I cant run away from the west
I like your video. Pretty in-depth . I hate suburbs and , with cronies capitalism rent is crazy but I love a walkable neighborhood..parks , coffee, Mediterranean, Tacos ,pizza and coffee shops. But affordable is important.
Ready to talk about Selling or Buying Process in Cincy?
TEXT/CALL👉🏾 513-402-1295
email👉 vic@housesvic.com
website 👉www.housesvic.com/
Book a time to speak 👇👇
calendly.com/housesvic/30min
Great comparison. I feel like you missed the nail with a few points on Columbus. I live in Cincinnati I love it! The rest of my family lives in Columbus. And I can say when I visit there’s a lot more things to do than people think. Columbus really is an underrated city. either way Ohio in general has the 3 c’s not many states have 3 major city’s like we do.
Great points. Can't wait to talk about how we compare to Cleveland. Ohio is a great place!
Good video bro, do a comparison video on Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati.
Appreciate it. 😆 that's the obvious next comparison Video huh ?
Thank you so much, I've been waiting for this.
Glad to help ☺️
I've been waiting for this. 💯
grateful for the views sir 🙏
@@HousesByVic Right On Soul Brother. 💯
To me, Cincinnati has more soul and there's more to do than in Columbus and I've been to Columbus before. 💯
Columbus is a lot bigger than people think. So much to do
@@HousesByVic I know, it's just Columbus' culture is stale compared to Cincinnati & Cleveland. Lol! 😂 You know how Cleveland is influenced by the northeast and upper midwest and Cincinnati is influenced by the lower midwest and upper south, Columbus is a great city but it seems kinda bland culture wise. 💯
@@RudolphManor to clevland is a big ole hood
@@RudolphManorit’s really not
@@rahimi4762 as far as Columbus being a great city? 💯
The effect of Intel, Google, and AWS moving to Columbus should be considered. These companies are bringing and estimated 40B dollar influx into the Columbus area. My home value has increased 15% because I live near where Intel is under construction. Intel will be the world's largest microchip producer when completed. They are bringing nearly 100 companies that are contracted with Intel. The influx of companies is causing a bump in home and property values and infrastructure. I think Cincinnati and Columbus are both great places to live. They do have a different feel because of their entertainment and geographies.
Thanks for your thoughts
@@HousesByVic I appreciate your videos. Please keep doing more comparisons. It really helps people who are looking to move and weighing their options.
Snooping around😂😂😂
As someone who lived in Columbus for ten years and from Cincinnati, Columbus has never had a more bustling downtown than Cincinnati. Go downtown Columbus at 8pm it’s a ghost town. Go downtown Cincinnati at 8pm it’s just getting started.
Columbus is bigger, but Cincy has a bigger city look and feel
Good video. As a Cincinnatian I’ve learned that metro population is a far better measure than city proper as a measure of true urban region size. In the 50s Columbus major Rhodes annexed it’s suburbs increasing the city size and artificially boosting population. don’t be fooled. Cincinnati was hemmed in by geography. But it’s area is in fact larger. If Dayton and Cincinnati merge metros or will be the largest overall section of the state, bringing attention to it. Need to talk to the ACS American community service about this to change rules on how to include Dayton-cincy in a metro
Thanks for sharing. Dayton is a pretty proud town. I don't know if that will happen 🤔
It doesn’t matter. As a whole Franklin county grew. Metro Cincy is more spread out over 3 states.
@@HousesByVic From what I have heard, Cincinnati would not want to be associated with Dayton. For years, the people there referred to Dayton as “Little Detroit”, due to the number of automotive manufacturing plants and related businesses that Dayton used to have. Those plants left Dayton, which has really harmed the local economy, thus the “Detroit” reference. Like a lot Great Lakes area cities, Dayton is still struggling with such losses and isn’t what it once was. I don’t know that Dayton would want to merge with Cincinnati, but even more so I think Cincinnati residents don’t want to be associated with Dayton. But it is also true that a lot of the area between the cities has seen a lot of development and is an attractive area to live.
I have lived in both Columbus and Cincinnati, and this my opinion. Cincinnati maybe smaller in population and physical area, it has a bigger Metro area. It has move influence over the surrounding communities. When I live in Cincinnati I actually lived in Butler country but considered it Cincinnati. I would regularly hang out with friends in Downtown Cincinnati or northern Kentucky and still considered it my area. In Columbus people on the northside stay on the northside, westside residents consider themselves westsiders and not from Columbus. Dublin, Hillard, Westville and Worthington are considered their own communities. Residents in the Columbus Metro Area tend to stay in the own click . Cincinnati's physical growth was always limited, they can not grow to the south because they are on a river. Cincinnati could not grow to the north because or Norwood. While Columbus has pretty much used water rights to expand in all areas of Franklin county and beyond.
My man ... the foodie scene is SO MUCH better in Cincy
When he talked about us having less colleges and I think that’s bc here osu is the college to go to or Columbus state our college culture is huge here for the only osu tho
Which one has better public transit?
Is it possible to live in either of them car-free?
You can defiantly survive in Cincinnati car free, as many residents rely on the Metro bus line. Thanks for the question, that is a topic i should have included
@@HousesByVic 🙏
I've lived in Columbus for 48 years, and as long as you stay in Franklin county there is a reliable bus system.
For the rest of the surrounding counties, you'll need a vehicle.
@@briansmith48 🙏
I don't know much about Cincinnati but Columbus is my mom's best friend is from? She drives back and forth to visit family sometimes. If I was to live in Ohio, it would be Columbus, Cleveland is too cold!
Greater Cincinnati includes SE Indiana not SW Indiana.
Better in between here in Dayton 👍
Xavier is pronounced 'zavier".
Columbus doesn't hve the "big city flavor" that Cincinnati and Cleveland has. It's rather bland to me.
I've lived in both, Cincy hands down. Columbus has many positives, but it's essentially a giant incorporated suburb. Far less history and historic neighborhoods.
i dont like that 😂 you summed it up its alot of cota sacs in Columbus
Yes, Columbus has annexed most of Franklin County, which is why they are the largest Ohio city-proper in population. But if you take in the entire Cleveland metro, then the Cleveland area has the most people. I personally have never thought that Cincinnati is a pretty city. Passing through on I-75, it is just not that attractive. I do gibe Cincinnati credit for the redevelopment of the Over-the-Rhine/Vine Street area, which used to be very sketchy.
Cincinnati has character, Columbus has none.
They used to have similar economies and were competitive with each other. Cincinnati has struggled and stagnated and just can't compete with Columbus for jobs and investment the way it used to.
The Ohio State University is one of the highest ranked universities in the world(top 100). Sorry but having more universities doesn't give Cincinnati an advantage.
It's an exceptional school!
Columbus is just a big bland city. Has no feel to it
I wouldn’t say that Ohio has been a dominant Republican state for the last 40 years. The state voted for Obama twice.
It was a solid swing/bellwether state up until the Trump era.
One final note - there really are no blue and red states for the most part. It’s blue cities and red small towns/rural areas.
Whether a state is red or blue mostly boils down to what percentage/ratio of the population lives in big cities and their suburbs and suburbs vs those living in rural areas/small towns.
Yeah Ohio has been a purple state, recently its been more red but it's the trump effect, were trump is gone, it will be back to purple.
Cincy is just better, lived in both, any opinion otherwise is just copium.
im from Cincinnati lived in Columbus only positive is Columbus has less hills Columbus has new age shopping centers.. Cincinnati has more parks more culture
Columbus is superior and it's not particularly close!
Columbus aint shhh**
Ohio is anti abortion not pro abortion.
Skeeoto mile LOL It is 'SIGH-OH-TO.'
Columbus so beautiful more than cincinnati
Columbus is hell
What do you hate about it?
@@HousesByVic it's a fake ass wanna be important and big flat boring hole in mid Ohio 😂
Columbus is great. 😄👍
I guess west side of the city, which is a guetto that personally reminds me of West Oakland in California. Damn it seems like I cant run away from the west
I guess west side of the city, which is a guetto that personally reminds me of West Oakland in California. Damn it seems like I cant run away from the west
I like your video. Pretty in-depth . I hate suburbs and , with cronies capitalism rent is crazy but I love a walkable neighborhood..parks , coffee, Mediterranean, Tacos ,pizza and coffee shops. But affordable is important.
Glad you enjoyed
Both cities are shitty not impressed