Currently living in Raleigh and cannot express enough the fact that you have to drive EVERYWHERE. Everything is spaced out between Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill. It's a 30min commute if you're traveling at night because during the day, you're sitting in either never ending construction traffic or accidents for at least an hour. Absolutely no thought into public infrastructure whatsoever.
You can ride unlimited between downtown Raleigh and Durham for $1k yearly. That same unlimited bus pass yearly gets you between downtown Raleigh and Chapel Hill. Seems reasonable. ❤❤❤
Totally agreed. Moved here a few weeks ago. Grocery is 20 min away. Never been into this much of driving. Love the place tho ngl but hope to see more transit options or more mixed use developments.
No, it was thought, but not for the droves of outsiders that keep moving here. Becoming overly populated too fast and the ppl moving here want NY level transportation -_- Give me a break
I learned this a couple of years ago. If you move to a city because of benefits of a hype video, then by the time you get there those benefits will be gone. Cities are like stocks and if your taxi cab driver is telling you about one it’s time to sell
Totally true. I remember seeing this play out when the fracking boom in North Dakota came out years ago on RUclips and very soon after, said boom went bust.
NC is trash. Don’t transfer your license. It will take you 90days to get an appointment. The locals don’t think. The women want to be married in a month. lol I’m moving out this bs. Poor people that was born here. They have minds like they came out of slavery. They blame everything on race. lol bro work hard and get your knowledge up. Don’t befriend the locals. They are not ambition people. They want a family and settle broke. Lol
Have lived near Seattle for 8 years and each year the red light parking lot freeway kept moving out as I moved, now with Amazon hubs spreading out in the county, it can take 1:45 to drive' (crawl) 25 miles to the city. Started taking the light rail which is fine in the morning, you're the first on on, but evening, you're a sardine with some dude's **** in your *** to home. With WFH now RTO and everyone _verklempt,_ freeways will be road-rage parking lots, and light rail still a **** in the ***. Add to that it rains from October to June, lol. I mean dark, rain, rain, rain, maybe snow today, what did the weather say?
As a Raleigh native, I’m not sure how to feel about this. The growth has been amazing but natives are really feeling the financial consequences of so many people moving here. Especially in the housing market. There’s also the looming construction of the Apple campus here in the next few years which promises 50k high paying jobs, but for who exactly? I doubt many here. It’ll be interesting to see how the situation develops.
Do encourage the locals of all ages (& certainly the young-uns) to acquire the knowledge/skills for upcoming in-demand knowledge/skillsets. Not only will you/they contribute to making your triangle a shining polygon, you'd even gain the choice to transport your skillset to wherever other opportunities might become more compelling. Some countries are moving fast, faster than things move here.
@@dec1slh With the kind of qualifications that most competitive positions require for a large corporation, especially an Apple, who would qualify other than people from larger tech markets? They touted the 50k jobs talking point as an opportunity for the area when what they really referring were the people in those jobs spending in the area. Of course, this is all conjecture on my part.
Atlanta is the other hub in the south that's really built up and Miami also tries to bolster its tech and finance scene with mixed results. It is true the south (and more broadly the Sun Belt) is attracting a lot of companies and employees from other regions (hmnn. wonder why). North Carolina is in a good spot as it has a university system like Boston, NY and San Francisco to support high paying jobs. Problem is those moving come with California or Northeast salaries and drive the cost of living up in the local economies. Long time residents then have to relocate as cost of living becomes unaffordable for them. Then the value proposition of moving there to begin with erodes year after year. Rinse and repeat. Then everyone decides to expatriate and move to Portugal or Mexico City for a better cost of living and quality of life. Everyone will end up living in Madagascar one day as that will be the only affordable place left. ;- )
As someone from Durham who also attends Duke, the lack of public transportation really hurts the area. Things are not accessible here. You really have to travel to access events and activities and if you don't have a car it's basically impossible. Investing in public transportation and sidewalks could do so much for the area.
Duke is who tanked the railway system. Duke has a stranglehold on Durham! And it wasn't until old, racist wypipo died out that Durham was able to build the new 885 road that connects all of Durham. Been here 30+ years, Durham is a great place but traffic, lack of public transportation and lack of big social events (NFL, NBA, etc) hurts Durham. Oh, and home prices are outta this world!
that's all the cities that are "up and coming" nowadays-- austin, nashville, miami, etc all suffer from lack of public transport and traffic congestion
@@MSkp4woMiami has somewhat ok transit if you stay within the urban core. Other than that you’d need a car if you live further out in the suburbs or residential nrighborhoods
My parents live outside of Raleigh and it’s amazing how fast everything has changed in the last 5 years. Condos are being built everywhere and it’s not as quiet as it used to be
@@joechen353 cold enough for all the nature to look dead and for everything to feel depressing. more importantly, the summers are really hot (IMO worse than florida) so you dont really have anything to offset the sad winters
I'm not sure if "amazing" is the correct word. "Depressing" more like it. I was born and raised here and I miss not ever having to worry about traffic and having houses that had more than 0.2 acres of land.
Or how you can seamlessly stroll into Morrisville from Durham and not know where the line is, or from Morrisville into Cary. (unless you live here). And RTP is mostly in Durham but sometimes it's hard to tell if you're on the Durham side of RTP or the Raleigh side (and I've been here 30+ years!)
yup. My good friend was involved in some of the planning for that project. Classic case of old white millionaire on the university board threatening to pull his funding if the project went thru. "Can't have no 'undesirables' hanging around my predominantly white affluent campus".
Allegedly, there was concern over vibrations from the rail system running near the one of Duke's hospitals and messing up delicate equipment like MRI's. Allegedly.
I grew up in Raleigh. Someone asked me the other day “what’s the identity of Raleigh?” And my answer was “transplants”. 🤷🏻♀️ it’s not the same. Disclaimer: I don’t think it’s a bad thing! NC wouldn’t have the growth and opportunities it does without the transplants/new businesses coming in. But the fact of the matter is that it’s changed a lot in the last 30 years.
But, to me, that's Raleigh's own doing tho. I went to school and lived in Raleigh for 8 years. Raleigh always wanted to be something it wasnt. Ill never forget them trying to have an acorn drop in North Hills on NYE like it was NYC. 🙄😒
I absolutely hate the "copy paste" townhomes they're building every where now. No front yards, barely a back yard, mandatory and increasing HOA fees are the norm. They are quite disgusting and lack any charm. Also they are built with "cheapest way possible" in mind.
Cary has two characters. If you can hear the train it's still lovely. Otherwise it's very bland. Has been forever. When I was a child they called it the Containment Area for Relocated Yankees. It's a silly thing to say but I grew explosively thirty years ago.
Even 40 years ago Cary was a growing suburb. Someday Charlotte N.C to Portland Maine will be one giant city. The area between Raileigh and Richmond need to fill in a little more.
@@robertd9850 I'm not seeing anything online like 30%. He's talking about local taxes in Raleigh-Durham. I guess housing prices went up and property taxes went up a bit. Together, it could be 30%. Edit: For any readers, I think an increase by 30% doesn't mean taxes went from 5% to 35%. It's more like 1% to 1.33% (these numbers aren't actually the taxes, it's just an example)
@@robertd9850 They are talking about property taxes. The assessed value of my house more than doubled in the most recent assessment. This resulted in my property taxes doubling for 2024 and I'm fortunate since I live in the county and don't have city property taxes on top of the county rate. Historically property assessments increased but at rates around 5% every 8 years so the big jump this area saw in 2024 is a shock for many long term residents.
I grew up and lived in Raleigh most of my life and the changes here are mind blowing. One thing the video didn’t include is crime. Downtown Raleigh has seen an increase in crime that is crazy because of overcrowded mess and homelessness is crazy here. You can drive along the highway and see homeless tents in the few forests that have not been destroyed by construction and deforestation. The uptake in crime has been seen in local news outlets which have coincidentally caused some small businesses to leave but you didn’t hear this in the video. I know this because I’m a longtime resident born and raised here. It does take about 30-45 minutes between Raleigh Durham and Chapel Hill depending on where you coming from. Housing prices are INSANE!! Apartments and single family homes are being built EVERYWHERE!! Still a great place to live and raise kids but I wouldn’t live near downtown Raleigh or certain parts of Durham for real. The new folks coming here don’t know this.
In major cities, about 80% of the surrounding suburbs and city itself is sketchy and run down. Raleigh still has more safe areas and only a few concentrated pockets of bad neighborhoods.
Agree as someone who lives in NC traveling in the triangle area is a nightmare your almost always loose a extra hour of time to traffic unless you take the train but the trains are nowhere near reliable or frequent enough to be useful for most rn. Which is why im baffled they shelved the commuter rail project in favor of busses which will do nothing to fix the issue
@@ZeusAVI Exactly. That’s why every trendy new area fizzles out once people get tired of being stuck in traffic. Companies just move to the next new trendy spot.
I'm From Detroit...I Love Visiting Raleigh every chance that I get...The Weather is Perfect , Excellent Hospitality, Decent Shopping, Lots of Restaurants,Slower Pace...They just need more sidewalks and better public transit,RDU needs more gates,New homes are expensive, Bad Drivers, Liquor stores closed on Sundays.
Metro-Detroiter living in Raleigh and this is all valid. It is great for young families like mine but I wouldn’t live here right out of college or anything.
Makes me happy I live in Charlotte. Better business climate without the additional growth that's squeezing locals out. It's bad enough already, we don't need it to get worse, but it will.
Charlotte's advantage is that there's a lot more public transportation, lightrail, investment than there was before. It's not where it needs to be yet but it's come a long way.
@@ashleybanks-wm4cg Except the universities, the public private partnerships, or Rhesearch Triangle Park. The Triangle's engines originated with the universities. They have always kept the Triangle connected with and in step with the rest of the world. I can't think of anything that Raleigh looks to Charlotte for guidance. Very different cities with very different ambitions.
@@stephenedwardsnyc not true Everything this video mentions Charlotte has been on top of and has built infrastructure for these people to move here against the interest of the locals this city has been gentrified up and down so many times Every young professional from every major college that just graduated immediately move here thats why Charlotte has gotten so young and is better for young adults than Raleigh Raleigh is more geared towards people trying to start a family but yeah Raleigh has most definitely taken from Charlotte playbook
Crypto is risky as many would say but I think the actual risk in Crypto is not investing, buying the capitulation isn't a tough call, but it is a very tough call to figure out what to do aside holding. I remember when I just got into crypto back in 2019 but later in 2020 I ended up selling it because I was dumb and I didn't understand it. I studied and learned and now I know how it works. Got back into crypto early in 2023 with 10k and I’m up with 128k in a short period of time
I'm new to cryptocurrency and don't understand how it really works. how Can someone know the right approach to investing and making good profits from cryptocurrency investments?
As a beginner investor, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Myself, I’m guided by Coach Alex. A widely known crypto consultant
I started working with Coach Alex back in June, and my financial goals have never been clearer. It’s like having a strategic partner for my money with a solid track record.
3 words, quality of life. I’m a native North Carolina in, but I live in Austin Texas, I’m definitely feeling the pinch, but I’m so thankful. I have people who live in the RDU that are family.❤️🙏🏾
Growing up around Austin and living in the Triangle I can only say its no where near as bad as Austin or a lot of other urban areas, but everyear there is more traffick, more congenstions and all the other problems that go with rapid urbanization. So nope the area would need a 20 year break on growth to catch up to where it was.
While I am intrigued by the growth up there... It still shows the main problems with a booming region: lack of affordable housing and transportation options. The light rail plan should not have been curbed the way it was by Duke.
Moved from Raleigh and it was the best decision, not enough to do, food wasn’t as diverse or good as I’ve had in other places, the summer is super hot and with the humidity you often don’t feel like it’s worth going outside for too long.
Traffic is horrendous!! Housing is skyhigh!! Everything is pricy! Don't buy the hype... Pick a neighborhood you would like to live in...then pick a company you would like to work for...then visit. On a weekday get up and drive from the neighborhood you want to live to the business you want to work for. This will give you a real reality on how bad traffic is. Qualiyof life is suffering here now because of rapid growth.😢
We're not comparing Raleigh to larger cities like Dallas, la, etc! Raleigh's traffic for what Raleigh is and it's existing infrastructure is horrendous! Ask any commuter in Wake county if they think traffic is horrible and you will be enlightened.
European here. Visited Raleigh back in March and the lack of sidewalks in some places is simply absurd. I’m used to walking and it was virtually impossible there. Too bad, because some neighbourhoods I saw looked quite nice.
You have to understand that Europe being much older in terms of development means there are sidewalks everywhere because walking and horses were the only way to get around. The south was mostly agricultural which made sidewalks a far too expensive and unnecessary idea.
NC is like Virginia 30 years ago. Northern Virginia expanded rapidly with high paying jobs with an influx of highly educated professional, most the rest of the state has lagged. The rural parts of VA are just like the rural parts of NC, stuck in the past, full of bitter people that don't have the skills or education to advance.
I definatly agree with this video I live in small town in NC and the rate of growth happening here is mindblowing. Non stop construction 24/7 not just the big cities
I have been living in the area for nearly 20 years. As many comments posted here, I agree that lack of quality public transportation is a drawback and a hinderance to densifying growth. If we had something like Seattle's Sounder commuter train, people could ride it to work and use that time to check email, scroll through their phone, read a book. And getting more people off the highways would ease congestion and reduce commute times.
Well, let me put it this way. Since the media started to promote this state, crime had gone up tremendously, and rent is up the ruff. Traffic now is a nightmare. We are soon moving out.
@@barrygoldwasser5449 Public schools in North Carolina consistently rank as the worst performing schools in America. 43rd according to World Population Review 48th according to Network For Public Education 40th according to U.S. News & World Report 1 in 3 schools are considered low performing according to the WRAL. Worst still it is 48th in school funding levels, as reported by the Education Law Center Which would be fine if Per-Pupil Spending wasn't dead last according to the same report by the Education Law Center By WHAT metric would the be considered some of the best performing schools in the country?
I like this neck-and-neck competition between Georgia and North Carolina for the past 30 years in terms of population, economic growth, and business-friendly policies
@@ryanc4955 It’s physically bigger by surface area. 297.7 sq miles (Charlotte) compared to 132.4 sq miles (Atlanta). It’s also bigger in population too. Edit: Googled specific numbers for you rq.
@@ryanc4955 Charlotte, NC has nearly double the population (180% to be precise) of Atlanta, GA according to the United States Census Bureau in 2022. You may be mixing up Charlotte and Raleigh.
Note to CNBC. If you approach a citizen of Chapel Hill and suggest it is a suburb of Durham, prepared to be smacked upside the head. Durham didn't even exist when the University of North Carolina was founded in 1789.. Durham was founded after a bunch of Union soldiers ransacked a tobacco warehouse and took the crop back to Philadelphia. A businessman there was so impressed by the flavor of the weed he immediately launched a business importing the crop. A former Confederate who was captured by the Union Army, Washington Duke, returned to what is now Durham and A man named Washington Duke started producing pipe tobacco. His business grew wildly, and his son, James, made enough money to buy out his competitors and soon controlled the largest tobacco industry in the world. Washington Duke, by then retired founded Trinity College, which ultimately became Duke University. Durham stagnated in 1970s-90s, but it's the coolest town in the state today. But please, don't call Chapel Hill a suburb of Durham. It is a laughable, insulting concept.
Washington Duke wasn't the founder of Trinity College. Duke started as Brown's School house in 1832 in Randolph County, NC. It got its charter in 1841 and was renamed Union Institute Academy, then Normal Collage in 1851. It was finally named Trinity College in 1859. Trinity College had been around for decades before Washington Duke even came along. All Washington Duke did, with the help of Julian Carr, was lure Trinity College to Durham with an endowment fund in 1892.
I’m from durham-born and raised. This is true. That’s like saying duke is unc. It’s the biggest rivalry in sports lol. There will be some sort of violence towards you frfr😂😂
@@richiexp2 developers colluding to drive up prices, it's more profitable for them to chase the higher dollar markets- and mass migration increases competition for what affordable housing does remain
@@Tony.in.motion literally flew in yesterday and was really sad to see at least 5 developments of large clear cuts. Its an easy sell for real estate developers so it's not surprising it is happening. Raleigh has a pretty good master plan, but the laws in place are lagging and causing this urban sprawl to continue. It's sad, such a missed opportunity to build it right with higher densities and mixed zoning
@@silvermine2033that’s what NC democrats wants. Plus it’s Florida, VA, Texas and other states moving in the Carolina’s also. Always D riding the north east
@@silvermine2033 As someone who has lived in NC for a long time, GOOD! I still don't want anyone new here, regardless of political affiliation, due to rising costs.
I am from Charlotte, but I lived in Raleigh from 2008 to 2010 so my take is a little dated, possibly. First off, the Triangle covers a huge area , so be prepared to drive a lot and be stuck in lots of traffic. But, the area is absolutely beautiful! I'm not sure what it is, but its just a charming looking place. Very green, very clean a nice mixture of new and old, and its laid out in such a way that each part of the area has a distinct characteristic. Though Duke is in Durham (I think) Durham was a little late to the renewal party, but I hear its playing catch up well. I did have a couple gripes though. For one, the airport seems like it's in another place all together. its far, seemingly from everything. But my biggest gripe... the people. I lived off of Six Forks Rd, in North Raleigh, "the nice side of town" and I had a neckless snatched at a gas station, rear ended in a road rage incident, and biggest shock ever was not only noticing the HUGE disparity between the haves and have nots, but how drastic the "other side of the tracks" identity lived on there. And from my experience and mine alone, it was the first time I have ever felt strained racial tolerance, (I refrain from using that r-ism term) here in my great state of North Carolina. It broke my heart actually, because I also met some truly awesome life long worthy fiends while there too. And yes, they were. I know you're asking. Anyway, I can totally understand why a company would choose the area. Overall, its a great place, I visited a couple years ago and was amazed by the growth. It's slower than Charlotte, but not by much, so don't expect a sleepy little town or a booming metro it dwells in that goldilocks zone. For now.
not just that. the cities like cary are gone crazy by increasing property taxes very high. lots of condos and high raise apartments. But job opportunities are not all that great. Many big companies like google aren't hiring . U may see many house oweners not able to pay mortage soon.
Homeless population in Wilmington NC is literally because of this gentrification. If the counties don't stop the extreme overdevelopment then the lawsuits that follow will.
It's tough to hear, While some might suggest Florida or Texas as alternatives to California or New York, the question remains: what if Florida and Texas become out of reach? The solution can't possibly be moving to another country.
@@DiegoMejia86Learn to live tighter in townhouses and mid-rises, taking trams and metros like the rest of the world already figured out and implements as soon as funding allows. When you’re surrounded by specialist services, you’d be surprised how little space you absolutely must keep to yourself and your stuff.
Tax laws can be so complex, and it’s super helpful to break them down like this. Understanding how different policies can impact our finances is crucial for making informed decisions.
Making profitable investments during this time of political change can be risky without that insight. For me, working with an adviser is the best first step to navigate these complexities and make informed choices.
Gotta do transit oriented and micro transportation developments to service all the new residents. Or else it's going to turn into traffic nightmare like LA
I guess Raleigh-Durham is yet another former affordable place to live that’s gonna become unaffordable soon and price out many of the native locals who called this place home for many years. It’s already getting up there and priced out many locals from what I’ve read and heard.
When I first moved here a 3 bedroom apartment across the street from North Hills was 800-1000 a month… now you won’t find that anywhere besides the southside around MLK blvd. THAT area is being gentrified as well. Homes in Wendell & Zebulon are getting expensive & traffic out there is increasing dramatically.
@@kevinrod14 to be fair, finding a 3 bedroom apartment for 800-1000 is basically impossible in any major city today lol. Those will be 1500 at lowest if lucky. But I was looking up houses around there in surrounding suburbs as that’s where you typically go to buy a house, and even the 400k houses I saw looked like they’d be 200-250k maybe 4 years ago.
my uncle bought a house in old east durham for like dirt cheap (30k-15k) and that was in like 2012-2016 and I can now imagine it being like a couple hundred thousand or maybe in near a million if he builds a whole new house there. Its crazy because that was the hood hood back when they came there
Love how people moving here think that the metro is one singular entity. Us natives know there a HUGE difference between the East and West side of the metro. The West side (West Raleigh, North Raleigh, Cary, RTP, Chapel Hill, Morrisville, Apex, Holly Springs, South Durham) are where all the high incomes and jobs are. The East side (East Raleigh, North East Raleigh, South East Raleigh, Knightdale, Zebulon, North Garner) is ghetto asf. Loud, crazy drivers and dirty.
Before the press covered how amazing Seattle was in 2010, numerous times, it was a perfect place to live. NC, thank the press (if it starts getting out of hand with people moving there).
It's been out of hand of people moving here for the last 20 years. Wilmington NC for example. Population has almost tripled in just 20 years and it is hell. Including the people that move here too bring their terrible politics with them.
@@prosperomiponle7645 everything. It’s so spread out and takes forever to go anywhere. Nightlife sucks. Restaurant scene sucked. Now this was more than a decade ago, but I couldn’t live somewhere again without decent public transit. I don’t want to have to drive to do everything.
Yea I was excited moving here, but I'm leaving now. It feels like there isn't really thought put into to the growth. The one nice thing is there is a lot of Greenspace.
I'm so envious of these people who could get up and move to better cities and better states. We're stuck here in California and it's worse and worse and worse everyday week month and year. You guys are blessed
We'll be no better off than you when overgrowth wrecks us, all of the life has been sucked out and the rich transplants pick another poor region to colonize. Maybe Mississippi or Kansas. I give it 20 years. At least you don't have the humidity!
Success depends on the actions or steps you take to achieve it. Building wealth involves developing good habits like regularly putting money away in intervals for solid investments. Financial management is a crucial topic that most tend to shy away from, and ends up haunting them in the near future.., I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life!!
Stocks and Forex - an enlightened form of Investment, n the place where millionaires and future billionaires would come for motivation. You are seriously missing out if you have never been in one. Most importantly If you know how to trade you can make a ton of money no matter where you find yourself
I have been in the market since 2022, I have a total profit of $1.5 million realized with my $50 thousand invested in Bitcoin, ETFs and other dividend income, I am very grateful for all the knowledge and information you have given me.
Hopefully they fix public transit & offer more bus lines & higher frequency of times they're on offer as well as make it more walkable & bike friendly. Will help boost growth even more if people aren't stuck in traffic in their cars having to get anywhere
They are trying to make Charlotte as a central hub for finance/banking and raleigh as a tech hub. Charlotte seems somewhat successful except for some suburbs still look so rural. Raleigh not so much yet especially everything is still so spread out. Also, those two cities need good public transportation if they want to be the central hubs between northeast and southeast.
Charlotte has made investments in the Blue Line and there is expansion planned for the Gold Line to help people get in/out of Uptown. It's not where it needs to be yet but they've made good progress
No, the biotech industry in NC doesn’t rival that of Boston. It is a rounding error compared to biotech in Boston. It is great what RTP is achieving, but we should keep it in perspective.
No mention of Disney in Pittsboro. No mention of how wages aren't keeping up with housing prices. It's becoming impossible to afford the costs of living here anymore. My insurance rates have gone up 250% over the last two years, my escrow is extremely high.
6 months ago I sold my house and moved to downtown Raleigh. I save a lot of money by not having a car, and it's not a big inconvenience. I use the bus to go everywhere I need to, and it is free for me because I am over 65. I deliberately chose an apartment building that is across the street from the main bus depot so taking a bus is very easy. We have 6 main shopping areas and there is a direct bus to each one. Also, I am 2 blocks from the city center on Fayetteville st and there is something going on there just about every weekend. Plus, I have 60 restaurants and bars within a 5 block walk and several museums and show events in the same area. And my church and my bank are only 3 blocks away. For me, it is an ideal situation. And I just extended my lease at a 6% reduction in my rate because the competition in apartments is very stiff. New signees can get the first one or two months free.
It’s true, lived in the research triangle in 2014-2016 and it was growing even then…. People are so nice real southern hospitality, places like Durham and chapel hill were my favorite hangout areas. If I didn’t move to Phoenix for a job I would’ve def staying in NC beautiful place to live
This definitely does not tell the whole story. Much lower pay for non-top-executives, no public transportation, No real culture, lots more crime, cookie cutter suburb sprawl, overpriced homes, rising taxes, public schools are way behind north east. I’ve lived in both Charlotte and Raleigh. Way more to do in Charlotte! Looking forward to moving back to northeast. Very low vibe and not pro-small business.
As a resident it’s great to live here. But as a small business owner, expect a significant pay cut than other areas due to excessive competition and shop around mentality
The people who's opinions matter most in a situation like this are the natives, and I'm willing to bet that most natives aren't very enthusiastic about the disruption caused by this transformation in the name of "progress".
NC resident here (I live in NC's third largest city Greensboro): let me tell you that all this growth has been coming at a big cost for residents like me. North Carolina is considered a "landlord friendly state" with no rent control. Real estate prices have gone through the roof and have caused average rent to skyrocket in a lot of cities, not just the Research triangle. Also, other cities have been seeing major investments recently. Greensboro, for instance, is home to the recently completed Overture factory for Boom Supersonic (the aircraft manufacturer aiming to build an American supersonic airliner). All of this is enough to convince me to leave the state.
Just recently moved to Greensboro, as I was forced to take a job here due to a looming layoff. Moved here from Alabama, and I can tell you I am not impressed. North Carolina is filled with outsiders running prices up, and voting in terrible policies.
@@rapidthrash1964 wow, hard for me to here your comments because I live in Raleigh, and was thinking seriously about moving to Greensboro! I see gboro as half the population of Raleigh, yet twice as much infrastructure, less crowded, more friendly, laid back, etc. Am I wrong?
@@steveallen489 Greensboro is part of the "Triad", and the population is less, but not vastly smaller than the Research Triangle. Greensboro like every other democrat ran city has the usual set up. High crime, panhandlers, sprinkled in with nicer areas. If you want to live in an area with low crime be prepared to pay out of nose to live there. Unemployment is rising however which is a good thing. More and more companies, are filing bankruptcy, layoffs, and job cuts are continuing to accelerate as well. So this will continue to put downward pressure on the local economy.
If you are coming to NC, be prepare to Buy a Car, Transit here is almost non existent, the infrastructure is much badly needed, SERIOUSLY...much needed.
@@swampwiz This is car centric mindset. Literally anywhere outside of the US people view public transportation as a fast and convenient way of getting around, not a welfare program for those who can't afford a car. Not to mention that car centric infrastructure and suburban sprawl are driving cities into bankruptcy. The "growth" that NC and other southern states are seeing is unsustainable.
@@buzilekk2118 You do know that the widespread adoption of cars was an evolutionary process based on the needs of people at the time. It is not some diabolical plan to destroy the world.
Terrible idea. Subways are very expensive and disruptive during years or even decades of construction. Remote work is possible for so many people now that it makes no sense to spend that kind of money. Better would be to turn failing malls into remote office centers for companies and push for self driving electric pods that can ferry people around on their schedules.
@@buzilekk2118that’s the thing, in most of the US it’s not fast, not convenient, and is heavily populated with homeless and mentally ill. Plus most of these people flocking to the South are buying single family homes which doesn’t translate well to mass transit. This isn’t Europe, this isn’t Asia.
Currently living in Durham, and I’m enjoying it so far so I say this with love: finance jobs pay about 15% less than they would in Dallas/Miami, *and* you have to pay higher taxes on top of that. Not sure what other industries are like
Been having great success investing in real estate in winston salem. Their beltway system will be finished in the next few years and the population has been growing for a long time
The irony is people flocking to these regions are ruining it, population boom equals deforestation and destruction of the forest and woodlands. The nature is what made/makes places like Alabama, Carolina, Georgia great.
So are you voting for Democrats? They have let roughly 8 - 10 million illegals in over the last 3+ years. Those people have to live somewhere. What do you suggest?
Okay it's not the people themselves that are ruining it. It's the development pattern that is ruining it. NC could design policies to create a beautiful city like Amsterdam or London but instead they chose suburban sprawl. So more nature will be destroyed and more traffic will be created. It's not the newcomers doing it. It's the policies that NC's own government made up.
I live in MOUNT AIRY NC aka Surry County. And our main city strip "601" has grown immensely since I've been born. Is extremely obvious that the old generation is dying out and the new generation don't have the same connection to the town like we once did😢
Before watching, the answer is the Research Triangle. Three excellent research universities (NC State, Duke and North Carolina at Chapel Hill) relatively near each other with a high cohabitation between the public and private sector, alongside business incentives.
6:53 I almost choked on air. Chapel Hill is NOT considered a suburb of Durham, although they belong in the same statistical area, no one in the Triangle considers the starkly different Chapel Hill, a suburb of Durham. Their city limits might touch each other, but there are VAST differences in income, culture, development, and a highway cutting across the suburbia that separates the two. Chapel Hill stands separately as a large town, just as Durham and Raleigh are full blown cities, nestled against each other just the same. The three together have large, indistinguishable interconnected suburbia, and all of that alongside all the other smaller towns that accompany the area, stand as one metropolitan region, a supercity of sorts. However Chapel Hill stands as an individual urban area just as Durham's core does as does Raleigh's.
@@robertd9850 Absurd! The BBQ alone is vastly different across the state. The coastal region's culture is nothing like the mountain region, and neither of those mimics the Piemont area of the state.
@@hksurefire9306 Not even remotely true. I know people that live near the coast, in the mountains and in the Piedmont. There is no significatn difference, there just isn't.
@@robertd9850 What, your cousins you grew up with? I have traveled across NC all year round for the past 20-plus years, and the only way you came to that conclusion is your head was stuck where the sun doesn't shine when you go across the state.
No matter how many people say, "stop moving here" it will never happen because people will always move to places that are growing especially with a strong tech scene. If you're from Atlanta, LA, Houston, Dallas, etc driving everywhere won't be a problem for you
Yes, there are many benefits to the Triangle and urban areas of NC. If you are moving from a cooler, lower humidity area though be prepared for a beat down. AC is a lifesaver but your days revolve around how hot and humid it gets. And the bugs...lets just say they are big and numerous. Limit eating BBQ. It's mostly sugar.
@@Geeksmithing People can get very emotional about BBQ sauce here in NC. The eastern part of the state prefers vinegar based, while the western part prefers tomato based. I have seen people almost come to blows over which is better. A guy I know from Alabama claims mayonnaise based is the best. :(
Born and raised in Raleigh. During my life theres always been a lot of trabsplants, but i still feel like it held onto some southern charm and hospitality. I moved away and everytime i go back it feels harder and harder to find. Not that people are rude at all, more so closed off than what they used to be. All that being said RTP is still a special place and my favorite area in NC!
I have lived in NC since I was 3 years old and 42 years old now. My father’s side of the family has lived in NC going multiple generations back and the growth has been terrible for the state in many ways. Sure there is more money here which has brought many jobs; however, the peace and beauty that I and my family knew in most of North Carolina has been destroyed. People can argue that there are still many beautiful places in North Carolina, that it is great there is all this money in North Carolina, and more jobs in North Carolina. But, all I can say is there are things in life money cannot buy. Take that for what it is worth but some us from North Carolina miss the state it use to be.
One of the gentlemen in the video mentions NC was the second poorest state in the U.S. at the time Research Triangle Park was created by the state government which was in 1959. You prefer it to remain in a state of underdevelopment with a high percentage of impoverished residents like Mississippi and Louisiana?
I literally just said that. North Carolinians fleeing to South Carolina to get away from the gentrification and densification. This brings with it populations that treasure social status and efficiency over Gods and nature like our people. They move here to grind away their lives and our lands while expecting to be treated with respect for working.
@@jupiterhammon689 like I said, money can’t buy some things in life. My family lineage may not have had that California or New York money but we had a happiness none of that money could ever buy in this lifetime. That was and will always be the difference between people like us and people from the northeast or from out west.
People are not moving to North Carolina. They are moving to a small land mass making up roughly 9% of the state. In turn creating a median income roughly 22k higher than the rest of the state. I feel like this point should have been explored a little in the “downside” portion of the piece.
Currently living in Raleigh and cannot express enough the fact that you have to drive EVERYWHERE. Everything is spaced out between Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill. It's a 30min commute if you're traveling at night because during the day, you're sitting in either never ending construction traffic or accidents for at least an hour. Absolutely no thought into public infrastructure whatsoever.
You can ride unlimited between downtown Raleigh and Durham for $1k yearly. That same unlimited bus pass yearly gets you between downtown Raleigh and Chapel Hill.
Seems reasonable. ❤❤❤
Totally agreed. Moved here a few weeks ago. Grocery is 20 min away. Never been into this much of driving. Love the place tho ngl but hope to see more transit options or more mixed use developments.
No, it was thought, but not for the droves of outsiders that keep moving here. Becoming overly populated too fast and the ppl moving here want NY level transportation -_- Give me a break
@@kaung_kknGo home. We don't need or want you here.
Lmao. 30 min drives are nothing.
If you plan to move to the area, plan on driving everywhere. Public transportation is terrible.
truth lmao
True, & hopefully it stays that way👍
Life of LA
@@Wi11iam69 why?
@@habong17359 Yea but LA is building decent public transit.
I learned this a couple of years ago. If you move to a city because of benefits of a hype video, then by the time you get there those benefits will be gone. Cities are like stocks and if your taxi cab driver is telling you about one it’s time to sell
Totally true. I remember seeing this play out when the fracking boom in North Dakota came out years ago on RUclips and very soon after, said boom went bust.
Depends on the underlying fundamentals
NC is trash. Don’t transfer your license. It will take you 90days to get an appointment. The locals don’t think. The women want to be married in a month. lol I’m moving out this bs. Poor people that was born here. They have minds like they came out of slavery. They blame everything on race. lol bro work hard and get your knowledge up. Don’t befriend the locals. They are not ambition people. They want a family and settle broke. Lol
Have lived near Seattle for 8 years and each year the red light parking lot freeway kept moving out as I moved, now with Amazon hubs spreading out in the county, it can take 1:45 to drive' (crawl) 25 miles to the city. Started taking the light rail which is fine in the morning, you're the first on on, but evening, you're a sardine with some dude's **** in your *** to home. With WFH now RTO and everyone _verklempt,_ freeways will be road-rage parking lots, and light rail still a **** in the ***.
Add to that it rains from October to June, lol. I mean dark, rain, rain, rain, maybe snow today, what did the weather say?
People do that? That’s not smart. Everyone looking for greener grass needs to stop, it’s all brown just in different patches.
Word for word, this exactly what happened to Austin, Texas
Periodt!
@@Mrchickenwing74 periodt pooh 💅🏿💅🏿💅🏿
✔️🎯
Yeah but public transport was A1 in Austin
And the rest of America. Nashville is the same way. I use to love travelling to Nashville for work.
As a Raleigh native, I’m not sure how to feel about this. The growth has been amazing but natives are really feeling the financial consequences of so many people moving here. Especially in the housing market. There’s also the looming construction of the Apple campus here in the next few years which promises 50k high paying jobs, but for who exactly? I doubt many here. It’ll be interesting to see how the situation develops.
Do encourage the locals of all ages (& certainly the young-uns) to acquire the knowledge/skills for upcoming in-demand knowledge/skillsets. Not only will you/they contribute to making your triangle a shining polygon, you'd even gain the choice to transport your skillset to wherever other opportunities might become more compelling. Some countries are moving fast, faster than things move here.
Why wouldn't locals be able to get the jobs if they are qualified?
Apple is moving here because they can hire from the area.
@@dec1slh With the kind of qualifications that most competitive positions require for a large corporation, especially an Apple, who would qualify other than people from larger tech markets? They touted the 50k jobs talking point as an opportunity for the area when what they really referring were the people in those jobs spending in the area. Of course, this is all conjecture on my part.
@@JakeSmith-jy1kx I don't dispute that. However, I still think that majority of folks in those positions will be from elsewhere.
RIP to affordable life in North Carolina
Everyone is moving to the South.
@@C1K450most southern states aren't seeing this.
@@Gypsum179yes they are
Smh, you know it’s bad if North Carolina isn’t affordable
Atlanta is the other hub in the south that's really built up and Miami also tries to bolster its tech and finance scene with mixed results. It is true the south (and more broadly the Sun Belt) is attracting a lot of companies and employees from other regions (hmnn. wonder why). North Carolina is in a good spot as it has a university system like Boston, NY and San Francisco to support high paying jobs. Problem is those moving come with California or Northeast salaries and drive the cost of living up in the local economies. Long time residents then have to relocate as cost of living becomes unaffordable for them. Then the value proposition of moving there to begin with erodes year after year. Rinse and repeat. Then everyone decides to expatriate and move to Portugal or Mexico City for a better cost of living and quality of life. Everyone will end up living in Madagascar one day as that will be the only affordable place left. ;- )
As someone from Durham who also attends Duke, the lack of public transportation really hurts the area. Things are not accessible here. You really have to travel to access events and activities and if you don't have a car it's basically impossible. Investing in public transportation and sidewalks could do so much for the area.
Duke is who tanked the railway system. Duke has a stranglehold on Durham! And it wasn't until old, racist wypipo died out that Durham was able to build the new 885 road that connects all of Durham. Been here 30+ years, Durham is a great place but traffic, lack of public transportation and lack of big social events (NFL, NBA, etc) hurts Durham. Oh, and home prices are outta this world!
that's all the cities that are "up and coming" nowadays-- austin, nashville, miami, etc all suffer from lack of public transport and traffic congestion
@@MSkp4woMiami has somewhat ok transit if you stay within the urban core.
Other than that you’d need a car if you live further out in the suburbs or residential nrighborhoods
Many of the hometown people are against public transportation
My parents live outside of Raleigh and it’s amazing how fast everything has changed in the last 5 years. Condos are being built everywhere and it’s not as quiet as it used to be
May I ask how the weather is in wintertime; mild or 32°. Just getting some idea because I'm planning to relocate from N.Y.
Yes I moved here with my family and I agree
@@joechen353 cold enough for all the nature to look dead and for everything to feel depressing. more importantly, the summers are really hot (IMO worse than florida) so you dont really have anything to offset the sad winters
@@joechen353 It only snows very rarely there, hot as hell in the summer
I'm not sure if "amazing" is the correct word. "Depressing" more like it. I was born and raised here and I miss not ever having to worry about traffic and having houses that had more than 0.2 acres of land.
As a native North Carolinian, I can't tell if I'm in Raleigh, Durham or Chaple Hill due to the trees. So many trees!
Or how you can seamlessly stroll into Morrisville from Durham and not know where the line is, or from Morrisville into Cary. (unless you live here). And RTP is mostly in Durham but sometimes it's hard to tell if you're on the Durham side of RTP or the Raleigh side (and I've been here 30+ years!)
We love the trees! Keep them!!
@@AB_1211 cary is better than all of them so you can tell
there gonna knock down all the trees to put up housing 😢
There is no one to blame over the shelving of the light rail project than Duke University. Their pushback killed it
Why did they do that?
@@blayses3116 Because they are in the pockets of the Koch Brothers.
that project was dead on arrival. terribly planned.
yup. My good friend was involved in some of the planning for that project. Classic case of old white millionaire on the university board threatening to pull his funding if the project went thru. "Can't have no 'undesirables' hanging around my predominantly white affluent campus".
Allegedly, there was concern over vibrations from the rail system running near the one of Duke's hospitals and messing up delicate equipment like MRI's. Allegedly.
I grew up in Raleigh. Someone asked me the other day “what’s the identity of Raleigh?” And my answer was “transplants”. 🤷🏻♀️ it’s not the same.
Disclaimer: I don’t think it’s a bad thing! NC wouldn’t have the growth and opportunities it does without the transplants/new businesses coming in. But the fact of the matter is that it’s changed a lot in the last 30 years.
But, to me, that's Raleigh's own doing tho. I went to school and lived in Raleigh for 8 years. Raleigh always wanted to be something it wasnt. Ill never forget them trying to have an acorn drop in North Hills on NYE like it was NYC. 🙄😒
That’s why I like Raleigh. I never would have moved here (I’m a transplant) if it wasn’t. That’s the appeal. People from all over.
It’s def not the same. Bringing the wrong mentality in
@@JakeSmith-jy1kxdiversity of ideas and lifestyles, makes life amazing.
@@OsmoticReleaseDon't it?
I absolutely hate the "copy paste" townhomes they're building every where now. No front yards, barely a back yard, mandatory and increasing HOA fees are the norm. They are quite disgusting and lack any charm. Also they are built with "cheapest way possible" in mind.
Last 4 years the real estate sky rocketed. The growth of cary near raleigh is crazzzzzzy.
Oh wow. I visited Cary a few years ago. It was a quiet, family friendly little town.
@@ambernecho its till a nice quiet place except it costs twice more at least
Cary has two characters. If you can hear the train it's still lovely.
Otherwise it's very bland. Has been forever. When I was a child they called it the Containment Area for Relocated Yankees. It's a silly thing to say but I grew explosively thirty years ago.
Even 40 years ago Cary was a growing suburb. Someday Charlotte N.C to Portland Maine will be one giant city. The area between Raileigh and Richmond need to fill in a little more.
Morrisville, just north of Cary, really blew up in that time as well.
Let’s not forget taxes went up 30% this year in the RDU area and will go up more soon. You know what isn’t going up? Wages
My raise was 3.5 % here.....
What taxes? I've lived in NC for years. State income taxes have stayed about the same, sales tax is slightly higher.
@@robertd9850 I'm not seeing anything online like 30%. He's talking about local taxes in Raleigh-Durham. I guess housing prices went up and property taxes went up a bit. Together, it could be 30%.
Edit: For any readers, I think an increase by 30% doesn't mean taxes went from 5% to 35%. It's more like 1% to 1.33% (these numbers aren't actually the taxes, it's just an example)
@@robertd9850 They are talking about property taxes. The assessed value of my house more than doubled in the most recent assessment. This resulted in my property taxes doubling for 2024 and I'm fortunate since I live in the county and don't have city property taxes on top of the county rate. Historically property assessments increased but at rates around 5% every 8 years so the big jump this area saw in 2024 is a shock for many long term residents.
@@ironrain1x In 2023 on average, the cost of living went up 4.4%. So you're still underpaid, just like us all.😅
They’re moving here because we’re one of the worst states for workers but awesome for businesses.
Same here in Texas.
Ah, no wonder a NC native and recent grad can't find an entry level IT job in NC. All these overqualified people moving here.
I grew up and lived in Raleigh most of my life and the changes here are mind blowing. One thing the video didn’t include is crime. Downtown Raleigh has seen an increase in crime that is crazy because of overcrowded mess and homelessness is crazy here. You can drive along the highway and see homeless tents in the few forests that have not been destroyed by construction and deforestation. The uptake in crime has been seen in local news outlets which have coincidentally caused some small businesses to leave but you didn’t hear this in the video. I know this because I’m a longtime resident born and raised here. It does take about 30-45 minutes between Raleigh Durham and Chapel Hill depending on where you coming from. Housing prices are INSANE!! Apartments and single family homes are being built EVERYWHERE!! Still a great place to live and raise kids but I wouldn’t live near downtown Raleigh or certain parts of Durham for real. The new folks coming here don’t know this.
In major cities, about 80% of the surrounding suburbs and city itself is sketchy and run down. Raleigh still has more safe areas and only a few concentrated pockets of bad neighborhoods.
How can we keep the crime rates lower?
Born and raised in Durham and living in Raleigh currently. Businesses are moving here mostly because this state is last in workers rights…..
It will fail if they keep building for cars.
People will get tired of being stuck in traffic just like in every other trendy growth area that failed.
We need more fast rail options or self driving rail systems for electric cars like you see in the movies .. 🍿
They are just trying to lure people to move there and work for less pay lol.
Agree as someone who lives in NC traveling in the triangle area is a nightmare your almost always loose a extra hour of time to traffic unless you take the train but the trains are nowhere near reliable or frequent enough to be useful for most rn. Which is why im baffled they shelved the commuter rail project in favor of busses which will do nothing to fix the issue
The entire South is built for cars yet it’s where everyone is moving. Americans love cars and it’s not changing anytime soon.
@@ZeusAVI
Exactly.
That’s why every trendy new area fizzles out once people get tired of being stuck in traffic.
Companies just move to the next new trendy spot.
Chapel Hill is not considered a suburb of Durham. I’ve lived here my entire life and never heard anyone say that. That’s crazy.
Agreed. It's its own place, it has its own local vibe.
I'm From Detroit...I Love Visiting Raleigh every chance that I get...The Weather is Perfect , Excellent Hospitality, Decent Shopping, Lots of Restaurants,Slower Pace...They just need more sidewalks and better public transit,RDU needs more gates,New homes are expensive, Bad Drivers, Liquor stores closed on Sundays.
Yea. They are ruining it
I feel like in general US cities are not pedestrian driven. They are made to cars. I had to drive everywhere whenever I went to downtown.
Metro-Detroiter living in Raleigh and this is all valid. It is great for young families like mine but I wouldn’t live here right out of college or anything.
Speaking of Detroit and the surrounding areas, shoutout to Etep of Wrestling With Horror, Darius Münchausen, Vigilante Williamson, and John Talks.
nailed it
Makes me happy I live in Charlotte. Better business climate without the additional growth that's squeezing locals out. It's bad enough already, we don't need it to get worse, but it will.
Charlotte's advantage is that there's a lot more public transportation, lightrail, investment than there was before. It's not where it needs to be yet but it's come a long way.
Charlotte started all the trends mentioned in this video Charlotte was just prebuilt for it honestly
Charlotte is the capital and not Raleigh. Don’t let these people lie to you.
@@ashleybanks-wm4cg Except the universities, the public private partnerships, or Rhesearch Triangle Park. The Triangle's engines originated with the universities. They have always kept the Triangle connected with and in step with the rest of the world. I can't think of anything that Raleigh looks to Charlotte for guidance. Very different cities with very different ambitions.
@@stephenedwardsnyc not true Everything this video mentions Charlotte has been on top of and has built infrastructure for these people to move here against the interest of the locals this city has been gentrified up and down so many times Every young professional from every major college that just graduated immediately move here thats why Charlotte has gotten so young and is better for young adults than Raleigh Raleigh is more geared towards people trying to start a family but yeah Raleigh has most definitely taken from Charlotte playbook
Crypto is risky as many would say but I think the actual risk in Crypto is not investing, buying the capitulation isn't a tough call, but it is a very tough call to figure out what to do aside holding. I remember when I just got into crypto back in 2019 but later in 2020 I ended up selling it because I was dumb and I didn't understand it. I studied and learned and now I know how it works. Got back into crypto early in 2023 with 10k and I’m up with 128k in a short period of time
I'm new to cryptocurrency and don't understand how it really works. how Can someone know the right approach to investing and making good profits from cryptocurrency investments?
As a beginner what do I need to do? How can I invest, on which platform? If you know any please share.
As a beginner investor, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Myself, I’m guided by Coach Alex. A widely known crypto consultant
I started working with Coach Alex back in June, and my financial goals have never been clearer. It’s like having a strategic partner for my money with a solid track record.
I'm a beginner please how can i reach out Coach Alex
3 words, quality of life. I’m a native North Carolina in, but I live in Austin Texas, I’m definitely feeling the pinch, but I’m so thankful. I have people who live in the RDU that are family.❤️🙏🏾
Just hope the area can stay ahead of infrastructure needs (traffic, water supply, school capacity)
Too late.
@@spookysea-monster5297 lol you’re probably right. Water isn’t a problem, yet, although drought caused water supplies to nearly run dry in ~2007.
@@spookysea-monster5297 Came here to say this
It certainly hasn't
Growing up around Austin and living in the Triangle I can only say its no where near as bad as Austin or a lot of other urban areas, but everyear there is more traffick, more congenstions and all the other problems that go with rapid urbanization. So nope the area would need a 20 year break on growth to catch up to where it was.
While I am intrigued by the growth up there... It still shows the main problems with a booming region: lack of affordable housing and transportation options. The light rail plan should not have been curbed the way it was by Duke.
Duke owns everything around here! I was so p----d when they stopped the rail system.
Moved from Raleigh and it was the best decision, not enough to do, food wasn’t as diverse or good as I’ve had in other places, the summer is super hot and with the humidity you often don’t feel like it’s worth going outside for too long.
Where did you move to?
I'm in Raleigh now
I'm in Raleigh now
Colorado
@@JackKelleher13Everywhere has problems. Colorado is no different. A lot more snow than NC that's for sure. I'll take warmth over freezing.
Traffic is horrendous!! Housing is skyhigh!!
Everything is pricy!
Don't buy the hype... Pick a neighborhood you would like to live in...then pick a company you would like to work for...then visit. On a weekday get up and drive from the neighborhood you want to live to the business you want to work for. This will give you a real reality on how bad traffic is. Qualiyof life is suffering here now because of rapid growth.😢
Traffic is one of the reasons I love Raleigh. So much less traffic here and so much cheaper than Portland was.
Traffic in Raleigh is a joke compared to most large US cities.
We're not comparing Raleigh to larger cities like Dallas, la, etc! Raleigh's traffic for what Raleigh is and it's existing infrastructure is horrendous! Ask any commuter in Wake county if they think traffic is horrible and you will be enlightened.
@@steveallen489 I’m a commuter in wake county. One of the reasons I live in Raleigh is because the traffic is so light.
@@JakeSmith-jy1kx You basically just told me to avoid Portland at all costs.
The triangle is already bad enough.
European here. Visited Raleigh back in March and the lack of sidewalks in some places is simply absurd. I’m used to walking and it was virtually impossible there. Too bad, because some neighbourhoods I saw looked quite nice.
That’s everywhere in America besides big cities on the east coast, we are car centric
Stay put in Europe. Car insurance is thru the roof thanks to Bidenomics voters!
It's designed that way to try to keep communities separated.
@@user-l4y7r04wy6iv Oh please.
You have to understand that Europe being much older in terms of development means there are sidewalks everywhere because walking and horses were the only way to get around. The south was mostly agricultural which made sidewalks a far too expensive and unnecessary idea.
Decent paying tech jobs sure, but painfully expensive to live in the triangle. In general, outside of like 5-6 cities, NC is painfully underdeveloped.
NC is like Virginia 30 years ago. Northern Virginia expanded rapidly with high paying jobs with an influx of highly educated professional, most the rest of the state has lagged. The rural parts of VA are just like the rural parts of NC, stuck in the past, full of bitter people that don't have the skills or education to advance.
As expensive as New York or San Francisco?
@@ahmedzakikhan7639probably 80% the cost with 70% of the pay
You can say that about every. Outside of five or six cities it’s under developed.
Outside of 5-6 cities…why would you need more in a state the size of NC? Even Texas doesn’t have more that that lol
I definatly agree with this video I live in small town in NC and the rate of growth happening here is mindblowing. Non stop construction 24/7 not just the big cities
I have been living in the area for nearly 20 years. As many comments posted here, I agree that lack of quality public transportation is a drawback and a hinderance to densifying growth. If we had something like Seattle's Sounder commuter train, people could ride it to work and use that time to check email, scroll through their phone, read a book. And getting more people off the highways would ease congestion and reduce commute times.
transcribethis AI fixes this. Tech hub attracts many to NC.
Well, let me put it this way. Since the media started to promote this state, crime had gone up tremendously, and rent is up the ruff. Traffic now is a nightmare. We are soon moving out.
They come for the jobs and then leave because of the education. Your kids deserve better.
If you make big money send them to out of state boarding schools. Public education in the US is something to escape..
Hopefully more leave sooner than later!
Public education here, primary, secondary and tertiary is some of the best in the country. But, please leave. Seriously.
@@barrygoldwasser5449 Public schools in North Carolina consistently rank as the worst performing schools in America.
43rd according to World Population Review
48th according to Network For Public Education
40th according to U.S. News & World Report
1 in 3 schools are considered low performing according to the WRAL.
Worst still it is 48th in school funding levels, as reported by the Education Law Center
Which would be fine if Per-Pupil Spending wasn't dead last according to the same report by the Education Law Center
By WHAT metric would the be considered some of the best performing schools in the country?
@@volundros We have the best public high school in the country, NCSSM, and our private and charter schools are very good.
Its a prime example how cohesive and innovation and support can strengthen a state😊
I like this neck-and-neck competition between Georgia and North Carolina for the past 30 years in terms of population, economic growth, and business-friendly policies
Charlotte is already bigger than Atlanta funny enough, but it’s a financial hub rather than entertainment (music and film production) like Atlanta.
@@Lamont4DLOL in what way is Charlotte bigger than Atlanta? Some obscure metric?
@@ryanc4955 It’s physically bigger by surface area. 297.7 sq miles (Charlotte) compared to 132.4 sq miles (Atlanta). It’s also bigger in population too.
Edit: Googled specific numbers for you rq.
@@Lamont4D okay so other than a city limit border the population density is not there and the metro population is not even close
@@ryanc4955 Charlotte, NC has nearly double the population (180% to be precise) of Atlanta, GA according to the United States Census Bureau in 2022. You may be mixing up Charlotte and Raleigh.
NC has always had a chill vibe.
Note to CNBC. If you approach a citizen of Chapel Hill and suggest it is a suburb of Durham, prepared to be smacked upside the head. Durham didn't even exist when the University of North Carolina was founded in 1789.. Durham was founded after a bunch of Union soldiers ransacked a tobacco warehouse and took the crop back to Philadelphia. A businessman there was so impressed by the flavor of the weed he immediately launched a business importing the crop. A former Confederate who was captured by the Union Army, Washington Duke, returned to what is now Durham and A man named Washington Duke started producing pipe tobacco. His business grew wildly, and his son, James, made enough money to buy out his competitors and soon controlled the largest tobacco industry in the world. Washington Duke, by then retired founded Trinity College, which ultimately became Duke University. Durham stagnated in 1970s-90s, but it's the coolest town in the state today. But please, don't call Chapel Hill a suburb of Durham. It is a laughable, insulting concept.
Ok, nerd. 🤓
At the end of the day, Chapel Hill is a college town. Durham is an actual city
It's still a suburb
Washington Duke wasn't the founder of Trinity College. Duke started as Brown's School house in 1832 in Randolph County, NC. It got its charter in 1841 and was renamed Union Institute Academy, then Normal Collage in 1851. It was finally named Trinity College in 1859. Trinity College had been around for decades before Washington Duke even came along. All Washington Duke did, with the help of Julian Carr, was lure Trinity College to Durham with an endowment fund in 1892.
I’m from durham-born and raised. This is true. That’s like saying duke is unc. It’s the biggest rivalry in sports lol. There will be some sort of violence towards you frfr😂😂
This is not happening only in NC, this is happening all over the country (USA). Affordable housing is a thing of the past.
With the huge demand for affordable housing, I'm surprised there's no market for it...
“We will own nothing and we will be happy.”
The 2030 Agenda is well underway
@@richiexp2 developers colluding to drive up prices, it's more profitable for them to chase the higher dollar markets- and mass migration increases competition for what affordable housing does remain
Moved to North Carolina from New Jersey 7 years ago. I love it here so much and never want to leave… but I hate that everyone is coming here lol
The entire metro area is growing like crazy. I am watching deforestation happen in real time. Sadly it is mostly car sprawl
It’s sad that they just chopped down another section of forest for more parking at the airport. The public transportation is terrible. Very sad.
@@Tony.in.motion literally flew in yesterday and was really sad to see at least 5 developments of large clear cuts. Its an easy sell for real estate developers so it's not surprising it is happening. Raleigh has a pretty good master plan, but the laws in place are lagging and causing this urban sprawl to continue. It's sad, such a missed opportunity to build it right with higher densities and mixed zoning
@@nickbrady2197There is no demand for high density housing.
I do recall a lot of forest between Durham, Chapel Hill and Raleigh 40 years ago I imagine that is all one giant suburb now.
Petition the cities to implement a 1 million trees planting like NYC completed 9 years ago.
As someone who was born and raised in North Carolina, the "pro-business" is something that hurt workers. But they never discussed that.
NC is full.
Nothing but a bunch of NY,NJ, and CA residents now.
All they do is complain about how it’s not like the state in which they left.
They're going to turn the state blue.
@@silvermine2033that’s what NC democrats wants. Plus it’s Florida, VA, Texas and other states moving in the Carolina’s also. Always D riding the north east
This is exactly what is happening in Texas 😐
@@silvermine2033 As someone who has lived in NC for a long time, GOOD! I still don't want anyone new here, regardless of political affiliation, due to rising costs.
I am from Charlotte, but I lived in Raleigh from 2008 to 2010 so my take is a little dated, possibly. First off, the Triangle covers a huge area , so be prepared to drive a lot and be stuck in lots of traffic. But, the area is absolutely beautiful! I'm not sure what it is, but its just a charming looking place. Very green, very clean a nice mixture of new and old, and its laid out in such a way that each part of the area has a distinct characteristic. Though Duke is in Durham (I think) Durham was a little late to the renewal party, but I hear its playing catch up well.
I did have a couple gripes though. For one, the airport seems like it's in another place all together. its far, seemingly from everything. But my biggest gripe... the people. I lived off of Six Forks Rd, in North Raleigh, "the nice side of town" and I had a neckless snatched at a gas station, rear ended in a road rage incident, and biggest shock ever was not only noticing the HUGE disparity between the haves and have nots, but how drastic the "other side of the tracks" identity lived on there. And from my experience and mine alone, it was the first time I have ever felt strained racial tolerance, (I refrain from using that r-ism term) here in my great state of North Carolina. It broke my heart actually, because I also met some truly awesome life long worthy fiends while there too. And yes, they were. I know you're asking.
Anyway, I can totally understand why a company would choose the area. Overall, its a great place, I visited a couple years ago and was amazed by the growth. It's slower than Charlotte, but not by much, so don't expect a sleepy little town or a booming metro it dwells in that goldilocks zone.
For now.
We moved to RTP from Minnesota back in 2016 and so happy for our decision, especially for kids.
I have always lived in NC and I grew up in Raleigh, so I know the growth, I have seen many subdivisions come in and many businesses come in.
I've lived in Raleigh for 26 years which is my entire life and getting priced out by those moving from bigger cities.
Sucks but it happens.. literally the story of USA.
not just that. the cities like cary are gone crazy by increasing property taxes very high. lots of condos and high raise apartments. But job opportunities are not all that great. Many big companies like google aren't hiring . U may see many house oweners not able to pay mortage soon.
Homeless population in Wilmington NC is literally because of this gentrification. If the counties don't stop the extreme overdevelopment then the lawsuits that follow will.
It's tough to hear, While some might suggest Florida or Texas as alternatives to California or New York, the question remains: what if Florida and Texas become out of reach? The solution can't possibly be moving to another country.
@@DiegoMejia86Learn to live tighter in townhouses and mid-rises, taking trams and metros like the rest of the world already figured out and implements as soon as funding allows. When you’re surrounded by specialist services, you’d be surprised how little space you absolutely must keep to yourself and your stuff.
It won’t last. Home prices will rise and push folks out.
Home prices don't rise from people being out. They rise because of competition from people seeking to move in ❤❤❤ !!😊
Let's go NC ❤❤❤
That's a supply vs demand issue, not a given.
North Carolina in the house! Proud of being from NC!
Same.. not so much the football team though
Yes, me too! Wish the growth would slow down some though, it's getting out of hand.
Same greatest state to live in aside from Texas. We have mountains and the beach . I love NC
@@Vociferus142 It's a basketball state.
Tax laws can be so complex, and it’s super helpful to break them down like this. Understanding how different policies can impact our finances is crucial for making informed decisions.
Making profitable investments during this time of political change can be risky without that insight. For me, working with an adviser is the best first step to navigate these complexities and make informed choices.
Getting into Triangle Park takes 30-45 minutes when in actuality it should be a 10 minute drive. The are is not ready for the density.
People should stop coming!
Yep traffic is absolutely horrible
Gotta do transit oriented and micro transportation developments to service all the new residents. Or else it's going to turn into traffic nightmare like LA
Not to mention the roads on I-40 still need work. Driving on uneven narrow two lane roads is getting to be annoying
@@ft9kopthat will never happen. They barely have sidewalks
I guess Raleigh-Durham is yet another former affordable place to live that’s gonna become unaffordable soon and price out many of the native locals who called this place home for many years. It’s already getting up there and priced out many locals from what I’ve read and heard.
When I first moved here a 3 bedroom apartment across the street from North Hills was 800-1000 a month… now you won’t find that anywhere besides the southside around MLK blvd. THAT area is being gentrified as well.
Homes in Wendell & Zebulon are getting expensive & traffic out there is increasing dramatically.
It’s already unaffordable. I was born here.
Don’t vote for NIMBYs
@@kevinrod14 to be fair, finding a 3 bedroom apartment for 800-1000 is basically impossible in any major city today lol. Those will be 1500 at lowest if lucky. But I was looking up houses around there in surrounding suburbs as that’s where you typically go to buy a house, and even the 400k houses I saw looked like they’d be 200-250k maybe 4 years ago.
my uncle bought a house in old east durham for like dirt cheap (30k-15k) and that was in like 2012-2016 and I can now imagine it being like a couple hundred thousand or maybe in near a million if he builds a whole new house there. Its crazy because that was the hood hood back when they came there
Love how people moving here think that the metro is one singular entity. Us natives know there a HUGE difference between the East and West side of the metro. The West side (West Raleigh, North Raleigh, Cary, RTP, Chapel Hill, Morrisville, Apex, Holly Springs, South Durham) are where all the high incomes and jobs are. The East side (East Raleigh, North East Raleigh, South East Raleigh, Knightdale, Zebulon, North Garner) is ghetto asf. Loud, crazy drivers and dirty.
I'm from southeast Raleigh and don't appreciate you calling our area ghetto.
Lmao SE Raleigh is not ghetto 😂
Horrible take but go on
yepp, we are also cannibalistic so you better just stay away.
Before the press covered how amazing Seattle was in 2010, numerous times, it was a perfect place to live. NC, thank the press (if it starts getting out of hand with people moving there).
It's been out of hand of people moving here for the last 20 years. Wilmington NC for example. Population has almost tripled in just 20 years and it is hell. Including the people that move here too bring their terrible politics with them.
North Carolina is a beautiful state but no amount of money would make me wanna live there again. Lived in Raleigh and it sucks.
What sucked about it?
@@prosperomiponle7645 everything. It’s so spread out and takes forever to go anywhere. Nightlife sucks. Restaurant scene sucked. Now this was more than a decade ago, but I couldn’t live somewhere again without decent public transit. I don’t want to have to drive to do everything.
@@ajr4187dude your smoking crack it’s one of the nicest places in the US go back to San Fran , sounds like that’s what your looking for
Yea I was excited moving here, but I'm leaving now. It feels like there isn't really thought put into to the growth. The one nice thing is there is a lot of Greenspace.
@@ajr4187 there is no uber?
I'm so envious of these people who could get up and move to better cities and better states. We're stuck here in California and it's worse and worse and worse everyday week month and year. You guys are blessed
Why can’t you move?
Moved here from OC 17 years ago. Would never move back.
We'll be no better off than you when overgrowth wrecks us, all of the life has been sucked out and the rich transplants pick another poor region to colonize. Maybe Mississippi or Kansas. I give it 20 years. At least you don't have the humidity!
Yall bout to make my rent go up
All it takes to be a tech hub is desirable weather and beautiful scenery.
Success depends on the actions or steps you take to achieve it. Building wealth involves developing good habits like regularly putting money away in intervals for solid investments. Financial management is a crucial topic that most tend to shy away from, and ends up haunting them in the near future.., I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life!!
Stocks and Forex - an enlightened form of Investment, n the place where millionaires and future billionaires would come for motivation. You are seriously missing out if you have never been in one. Most importantly If you know how to trade you can make a ton of money no matter where you find yourself
I have been in the market since 2022, I have a total profit of $1.5 million realized with my $50 thousand invested in Bitcoin, ETFs and other dividend income, I am very grateful for all the knowledge and information you have given me.
Congrats $1.5 million ? how did you do this please i am new to crypto and stock investing can you guide me on how to do this?
A good friend of mine also does business with him from Canada. he is a good man! His good works already speak for him.
I'm favoured, $43K every week! I can now give back to the locals in my community and also support God's work and the church. God bless Michael Davis
Hopefully they fix public transit & offer more bus lines & higher frequency of times they're on offer as well as make it more walkable & bike friendly.
Will help boost growth even more if people aren't stuck in traffic in their cars having to get anywhere
Companies have moved here so they can pay their employees less. Simple as that. Cheaper land and no unions. It's not supernatural
They are trying to make Charlotte as a central hub for finance/banking and raleigh as a tech hub. Charlotte seems somewhat successful except for some suburbs still look so rural. Raleigh not so much yet especially everything is still so spread out. Also, those two cities need good public transportation if they want to be the central hubs between northeast and southeast.
Charlotte has made investments in the Blue Line and there is expansion planned for the Gold Line to help people get in/out of Uptown. It's not where it needs to be yet but they've made good progress
No, the biotech industry in NC doesn’t rival that of Boston. It is a rounding error compared to biotech in Boston. It is great what RTP is achieving, but we should keep it in perspective.
I know, Bay Area and San Diego are far ahead of RTP
Absolutely agree
No mention of Disney in Pittsboro. No mention of how wages aren't keeping up with housing prices. It's becoming impossible to afford the costs of living here anymore. My insurance rates have gone up 250% over the last two years, my escrow is extremely high.
6 months ago I sold my house and moved to downtown Raleigh. I save a lot of money by not having a car, and it's not a big inconvenience. I use the bus to go everywhere I need to, and it is free for me because I am over 65. I deliberately chose an apartment building that is across the street from the main bus depot so taking a bus is very easy. We have 6 main shopping areas and there is a direct bus to each one. Also, I am 2 blocks from the city center on Fayetteville st and there is something going on there just about every weekend. Plus, I have 60 restaurants and bars within a 5 block walk and several museums and show events in the same area. And my church and my bank are only 3 blocks away. For me, it is an ideal situation. And I just extended my lease at a 6% reduction in my rate because the competition in apartments is very stiff. New signees can get the first one or two months free.
It’s true, lived in the research triangle in 2014-2016 and it was growing even then…. People are so nice real southern hospitality, places like Durham and chapel hill were my favorite hangout areas. If I didn’t move to Phoenix for a job I would’ve def staying in NC beautiful place to live
This definitely does not tell the whole story. Much lower pay for non-top-executives, no public transportation, No real culture, lots more crime, cookie cutter suburb sprawl, overpriced homes, rising taxes, public schools are way behind north east. I’ve lived in both Charlotte and Raleigh. Way more to do in Charlotte! Looking forward to moving back to northeast. Very low vibe and not pro-small business.
It’s actually really terrible in NC. Don’t move there!
Did it get flooded by Hurricane 🌀 Helene? 🤔
As a resident it’s great to live here. But as a small business owner, expect a significant pay cut than other areas due to excessive competition and shop around mentality
How will this one age?
The people who's opinions matter most in a situation like this are the natives, and I'm willing to bet that most natives aren't very enthusiastic about the disruption caused by this transformation in the name of "progress".
NC resident here (I live in NC's third largest city Greensboro): let me tell you that all this growth has been coming at a big cost for residents like me.
North Carolina is considered a "landlord friendly state" with no rent control. Real estate prices have gone through the roof and have caused average rent to skyrocket in a lot of cities, not just the Research triangle.
Also, other cities have been seeing major investments recently. Greensboro, for instance, is home to the recently completed Overture factory for Boom Supersonic (the aircraft manufacturer aiming to build an American supersonic airliner).
All of this is enough to convince me to leave the state.
I lived in Greensboro back in 98-99,much better back then.I moved back to Raleigh and same problem hêre.
Just recently moved to Greensboro, as I was forced to take a job here due to a looming layoff. Moved here from Alabama, and I can tell you I am not impressed. North Carolina is filled with outsiders running prices up, and voting in terrible policies.
@@rapidthrash1964 wow, hard for me to here your comments because I live in Raleigh, and was thinking seriously about moving to Greensboro! I see gboro as half the population of Raleigh, yet twice as much infrastructure, less crowded, more friendly, laid back, etc. Am I wrong?
More room for the rest of us
@@steveallen489 Greensboro is part of the "Triad", and the population is less, but not vastly smaller than the Research Triangle. Greensboro like every other democrat ran city has the usual set up. High crime, panhandlers, sprinkled in with nicer areas. If you want to live in an area with low crime be prepared to pay out of nose to live there. Unemployment is rising however which is a good thing. More and more companies, are filing bankruptcy, layoffs, and job cuts are continuing to accelerate as well. So this will continue to put downward pressure on the local economy.
As someone who lives in the dc area good luck to you guys y’all are gonna be pushed out very soon
My friend bought a house in Cary, NC and it costed him 1.22 Million $ for a single family home that costs ~750K in Austin, TX
Never should’ve came down here
Cary is known as a upscale town. Buy the same house south of Raleigh for 1/2 that.
@@kevinrod14 Buy more and invest before prices go up!
The property taxes in Texas is the catch on their cheaper properties tho.
Like, DOUBLE North Carolina's on homes.
Dang and Austin is overpriced as well
Charlotte is growing even faster..
If you are coming to NC, be prepare to Buy a Car, Transit here is almost non existent, the infrastructure is much badly needed, SERIOUSLY...much needed.
Virtually all Americans that aren't dirt poor have a car.
@@swampwiz This is car centric mindset. Literally anywhere outside of the US people view public transportation as a fast and convenient way of getting around, not a welfare program for those who can't afford a car. Not to mention that car centric infrastructure and suburban sprawl are driving cities into bankruptcy. The "growth" that NC and other southern states are seeing is unsustainable.
@@buzilekk2118 You do know that the widespread adoption of cars was an evolutionary process based on the needs of people at the time. It is not some diabolical plan to destroy the world.
Terrible idea. Subways are very expensive and disruptive during years or even decades of construction. Remote work is possible for so many people now that it makes no sense to spend that kind of money. Better would be to turn failing malls into remote office centers for companies and push for self driving electric pods that can ferry people around on their schedules.
@@buzilekk2118that’s the thing, in most of the US it’s not fast, not convenient, and is heavily populated with homeless and mentally ill. Plus most of these people flocking to the South are buying single family homes which doesn’t translate well to mass transit. This isn’t Europe, this isn’t Asia.
Love from Fayetteville North Carolina ❤️📈
Yay I’m glad I didn’t end up moving here.
States and cities believe they aren't replaceable
Currently living in Durham, and I’m enjoying it so far so I say this with love: finance jobs pay about 15% less than they would in Dallas/Miami, *and* you have to pay higher taxes on top of that. Not sure what other industries are like
Been having great success investing in real estate in winston salem. Their beltway system will be finished in the next few years and the population has been growing for a long time
The irony is people flocking to these regions are ruining it, population boom equals deforestation and destruction of the forest and woodlands. The nature is what made/makes places like Alabama, Carolina, Georgia great.
So are you voting for Democrats? They have let roughly 8 - 10 million illegals in over the last 3+ years. Those people have to live somewhere. What do you suggest?
Alabama!?
@@kia8077 Yep.
@@kia8077Alabama is actually underrated
Okay it's not the people themselves that are ruining it. It's the development pattern that is ruining it. NC could design policies to create a beautiful city like Amsterdam or London but instead they chose suburban sprawl. So more nature will be destroyed and more traffic will be created. It's not the newcomers doing it. It's the policies that NC's own government made up.
Wonderful piece, thanks!
I live in MOUNT AIRY NC aka Surry County. And our main city strip "601" has grown immensely since I've been born. Is extremely obvious that the old generation is dying out and the new generation don't have the same connection to the town like we once did😢
I live below you in Winston. I think it’s time we start gatekeeping the triad 😂😂😂
I’m a Texan and NC is a beautiful place. When I was there I love how green the state is compared to the ugly brown of Texas most of the year.
yes, please go there instead of TX. Thanks.
Before watching, the answer is the Research Triangle. Three excellent research universities (NC State, Duke and North Carolina at Chapel Hill) relatively near each other with a high cohabitation between the public and private sector, alongside business incentives.
6:53 I almost choked on air. Chapel Hill is NOT considered a suburb of Durham, although they belong in the same statistical area, no one in the Triangle considers the starkly different Chapel Hill, a suburb of Durham. Their city limits might touch each other, but there are VAST differences in income, culture, development, and a highway cutting across the suburbia that separates the two. Chapel Hill stands separately as a large town, just as Durham and Raleigh are full blown cities, nestled against each other just the same. The three together have large, indistinguishable interconnected suburbia, and all of that alongside all the other smaller towns that accompany the area, stand as one metropolitan region, a supercity of sorts. However Chapel Hill stands as an individual urban area just as Durham's core does as does Raleigh's.
i live in NC. There is no part of it that is VASTLY different from another part.
@@robertd9850 Absurd! The BBQ alone is vastly different across the state. The coastal region's culture is nothing like the mountain region, and neither of those mimics the Piemont area of the state.
@@hksurefire9306 Not even remotely true. I know people that live near the coast, in the mountains and in the Piedmont. There is no significatn difference, there just isn't.
@@robertd9850 What, your cousins you grew up with? I have traveled across NC all year round for the past 20-plus years, and the only way you came to that conclusion is your head was stuck where the sun doesn't shine when you go across the state.
@@hksurefire9306 Proud of that 5th grade response?
No matter how many people say, "stop moving here" it will never happen because people will always move to places that are growing especially with a strong tech scene. If you're from Atlanta, LA, Houston, Dallas, etc driving everywhere won't be a problem for you
Yes, there are many benefits to the Triangle and urban areas of NC.
If you are moving from a cooler, lower humidity area though be prepared for a beat down. AC is a lifesaver but your days revolve around how hot and humid it gets.
And the bugs...lets just say they are big and numerous.
Limit eating BBQ. It's mostly sugar.
You should eat vinegar based BBQ sauce. No sugar.
@@jamesstaley5611 Ehhhh, there is brown sugar in it, more often than not.
@@Geeksmithing There is no sugar in the sauce I make :)
@@jamesstaley5611 maybe there should be! 🤪 Red pepper flakes, hot sauce and apple cider vinegar can only do so much! 🤓😋
@@Geeksmithing People can get very emotional about BBQ sauce here in NC. The eastern part of the state prefers vinegar based, while the western part prefers tomato based. I have seen people almost come to blows over which is better. A guy I know from Alabama claims mayonnaise based is the best. :(
Born and raised in Raleigh. During my life theres always been a lot of trabsplants, but i still feel like it held onto some southern charm and hospitality. I moved away and everytime i go back it feels harder and harder to find. Not that people are rude at all, more so closed off than what they used to be. All that being said RTP is still a special place and my favorite area in NC!
I have lived in NC since I was 3 years old and 42 years old now. My father’s side of the family has lived in NC going multiple generations back and the growth has been terrible for the state in many ways. Sure there is more money here which has brought many jobs; however, the peace and beauty that I and my family knew in most of North Carolina has been destroyed. People can argue that there are still many beautiful places in North Carolina, that it is great there is all this money in North Carolina, and more jobs in North Carolina. But, all I can say is there are things in life money cannot buy. Take that for what it is worth but some us from North Carolina miss the state it use to be.
One of the gentlemen in the video mentions NC was the second poorest state in the U.S. at the time Research Triangle Park was created by the state government which was in 1959. You prefer it to remain in a state of underdevelopment with a high percentage of impoverished residents like Mississippi and Louisiana?
I literally just said that. North Carolinians fleeing to South Carolina to get away from the gentrification and densification. This brings with it populations that treasure social status and efficiency over Gods and nature like our people. They move here to grind away their lives and our lands while expecting to be treated with respect for working.
@@jupiterhammon689 like I said, money can’t buy some things in life. My family lineage may not have had that California or New York money but we had a happiness none of that money could ever buy in this lifetime. That was and will always be the difference between people like us and people from the northeast or from out west.
Now it’s time to build strong communities focused on small business, farming, trading and bartering.
this didnt age well
Rip
I’m from the area. We need better public transit
I feel bad for the locals who can no longer afford to live there.
❤love these tech docs they are interesting and informative
People are not moving to North Carolina. They are moving to a small land mass making up roughly 9% of the state.
In turn creating a median income roughly 22k higher than the rest of the state. I feel like this point should have been explored a little in the “downside” portion of the piece.