[quote author="CK" date=1243727299][quote author="PANDA" date=1243722216]Zovall, though I see similarities in schools, income, population, lifestyle with Naperville IL, Cupertino IL, Sugar Land, and even Plano and Flowermound, TX to Irvine, In my humble opinion, I have found Fulton County, Georgia to be the most similar to that of Irvine. Many people who live in the area consider Duluth as the Bevery Hills of northern Altanta. Some of the nice surrounding areas include Alpharetta, Marietta, Johns Creek, and Roswell, simlar to south counties, Mission Viejo, Aliso Viejo, Laguna Niguel, etc.</blockquote>
I dunno, Panda. You can post a lot of statistics, but those are just numbers. While there are many, many places with similar characteristics to Irvine --- for the most part I consider suburban Atlanta and suburban Los Angeles to be about as far apart as it gets. I think a fair number of us have been to many big cities around the country in our travels --- and I can say that places like Georgia and Texas --- while having wonderful merits --- <em>feel</em> totally different from the West Coast. I know you know what I mean.
Sure, I've had moments of frustration with the pricing here, and threatened to flee to some cheap "up and coming" state where I could blast Lynrd Skynrd loud and proud. Georgia, the Carolina's, Texas --- they all qualify. But when the chips are down, the only problem with leaving California is you have to *leave* California. I think I can safely assume you would prefer an Asian influenced city. While there are *some* Asians in suburban Atlanta and Dallas and (fill in the blank) --- none of those places are truly Asian influenced like you will find on the West Coast. Here, everybody down to the whitest of white knows the drill, and embraces the influences of the culture, because it is a part of our daily lives. It's second nature. I work for a big 4 accounting firm. I go to our Chicago office quite often. Panda, to walk the halls of the Chicago office and look at the faces, and then come home walk the halls of our similarly sized downtown LA office you would not even think you are on the same side of the world -- the demographics of the employees are that dramatically different.
So stop waffling and being seduced by 2nd tier options. If you truly want a substitute for Irvine, you'll need to come to the West Coast. Zov's right about Cupertino, but the housing stock is wildly different than Irvine. Arcadia in the SGV is very similar to Cupertino. San Ramon/Pleasanton east of San Francisco feel about the same as Irvine in housing stock, and while not quite as diverse its catching up in a hurry. Bellevue and Redmond outside of Seattle also would qualify, but the weather is not as good.
The West side is the best side, Panda.</blockquote>
Haha.. Ck . Panda is not seduced by 2nd tier options

I am just trying to start an interesting discussion thread as Reason is complaining that not many people are posting on IHB these days

I am just trying to make the point that for someone who likes Irvine and its Asian influence, will most likely like Duluth as well.
Dude, I am not arguing with you. 10, 20, 50, 100 years in the future, Southern California will always have the best weather, lifestyle, and beaches, will always have the more Asians than any other state, and will always be the home for the wealthiest Americans living in the U.S.