hurtloam wrote:
Do all American cities have a "down town" or is it just New York?
It is common with the larger cities and outside of those it varies with the size of the city/town and with the region; and very much so as you get in to the smaller to smallest cities.
Our little midwestern county seat farm burg of less than 10 thousand population has a downtown area along Main Street which is about 1/2 mile, 2/3km, long, plus a couple side streets, which have a couple buildings dating back to the 1840s.
Most of the downtown buildings along Main Street are the classic Victorian era brick and iron storefront style.
Some have obvious 1950s and 1960s remodeled fronts.
Even small midwestern towns of population less than 5,000, especially when seat of county government, will have identifiable downtowns, usually centered on the county courthouse.
Such as this one a county or two away from where I live,
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Carro ... 7981?hl=en Some of the older to oldest small towns in the northeastern states, especially in region called New England, have a very different look without what the same style of 'downtown' as even a lot of the oldest towns in our midwestern region do.
![Arrow :arrow:](./images/smilies/icon_arrow.gif)
Something it might be informational to do if the time and inclination are there, is get on Google maps for the US, and go around selecting different sizes of town and cities to zoom in on, select Satellite view, and then zoom in further and look around if Street View is available.
Landscape/region, population size, and city's age, can make dramatic differences in configuration of the smaller cities and towns.
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