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Does London have as much atmosphere as it used to have?

whether it's "proper" or not, give me those over the "proper" parts any day. Less noise, less busy, cleaner. Okay a few less places to buy an over priced coffee or meal, but i'll take that for a nice quiet clean leafy street.

entirely a "me" subjective judgement but the idea of living in zones 1-2, other than an easy commute, fills me with dread.
I don’t know. I am an infrequent visitor to London and I can’t stand the traffic, crowds and noise anywhere in the urban parts of the SE of England (probably other cities too but feel it most here)

When visiting the people I still know in London they are in zone 2 and on the tube, at least they’re connected and close to what I think are the good and interesting bits of a city compared to suburbs miles away from the centre which feel like they have a lot of the drawbacks but few of the benefits.

But it ultimately depends on the definition of your personal London.
 
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That picture gave me anemoia.
 
You cannot beat London for the mix of people and as I'm a people, that for me is all the brilliance summed up in one.
I would hate to live somewhere with a more homogeneous population.
London is best when you have an entire Saturday or day to yourself or with someone close. You wake up and the options are endless. This is when it comes into its own. I also have this private fishing lake on my doorstep that I am a member of and it’s my little slice of heaven. It’s never just about fancy meals and shopping is it.

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All of the positive we have listed can be replicated elsewhere but the options thing is less easy to replicate
 
Options go hand in hand with large numbers of people sharing a world city. Your patch of paradise is replicated North, East, West and centre.
 
I don’t know. I am an infrequent visitor to London and I can’t stand the traffic, crowds and noise anywhere in the urban parts of the SE of England (probably other cities too but feel it most here)

When visiting the people I still know in London they are in zone 2 and on the tube, at least they’re connected and close to what I think are the good and interesting bits of a city compared to suburbs miles away from the centre which feel like they have a lot of the drawbacks but few of the benefits.

But it ultimately depends on the definition of your personal London.
I’m not sure on that part of the suburbs, I basically live in one (we’re two mins from the London border), it’s 20 minutes to Richmond park and 40 to Waterloo. Pretty damn good place to live, cheaper to buy a house and live, lots of access to the places we love and we can drive to the country in like 20 minutes, and to Brighton in just over an hour!
 
You cannot beat London for the mix of people and as I'm a people, that for me is all the brilliance summed up in one.
I would hate to live somewhere with a more homogeneous population.
Spot on. I lived in a small town near Cambridge then a small village north of Peterborough. Coming back to London felt like normality returned, no more looks and me and my wife walked the streets or the side eyes if we were talking to a fellow Black or Brown person.

The only city I’ve been too that can match London for diversity of this kind is NYC.
 
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Living in Madrid I miss the melting pot but it's much sadder and more downbeat than here. I don't think London has the same streetlife or buzz as New York, Madrid and a few other places I've been - but obviously it isn't totally lacking in that either. London's population density is quite low meaning a lot of the bustle is just mardy commuters rather than residents. Other places have more joie de vivre.
 
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