The original statement that you made, that I responded to was this:
Shows what a city with vision can accomplish... get it together Jacksonville.
really?
There are those that have argued that Seattle should have had light rail 10+ years ago....remember, its a much bigger and denser metroplitan area than Jacksonville.
and this:
The Seattle metro. poulation is 3.3 million people....compared to our 1.3 million....and clearly their downtown areas is far more dense.
I think we've established that the city of Seattle isnt three times larger than jacksonville, nor is it really a much bigger or denser place. Jacksonville would be 75% of the density of Seattle, but it has 200,000 more voters that make decisions.
I disagree with idea that Seattle isn't larger than Jacksonville. The only way this would be true is if you're talking strictly land area (both developed and undeveloped in city limits only) instead of true urban area development. However, if this is you're argument, San Francisco, Tampa, Miami, Atlanta, Washington DC and St. Louis are all smaller than Jacksonville. Seattle is significantly larger all around.
As for the neighborhoods, even your images indicate a city with more dense low rise development in its urban core. No one is saying we don't have urban neighborhoods of similar character and feel (nearly every city does to some degree). Urban Seattle just has more of them.
The pictures pretty much tell the story of what its like on the street anyways.
You are correct in that the Downtown itself is much denser and better than Jax, but we never really disagreed on that, nor are we really disagreeing now.
Seattle is a larger version of what Jacksonville could have become if we never abandoned the city beginning in the 1950s. During our urban heyday, we had nearly identical density numbers. Seattle was just larger in overall scale.
1910national rank - city - population - city land area - city density21 Seattle city, WA......... 237,194 55.9 4,243
95 Jacksonville city, FL.... 57,699 9.3 6,204
192020 Seattle city, WA......... 315,312 58.6 5,381
79 Jacksonville city, FL.... 91,558 15.4 5,945
193020 Seattle city, WA......... 365,583 68.5 5,337
63 Jacksonville city, FL.... 129,549 26.4 4,907
194022 Seattle city, WA......... 368,302 68.5 5,377
47 Jacksonville city, FL.... 173,065 30.2 5,731
195019 Seattle city, WA......... 467,591 70.8 6,604
49 Jacksonville city, FL.... 204,517 30.2 6,772
196019 Seattle city, WA......... 557,087 88.5 6,295
61 Jacksonville city, FL.... 201,030 30.2 6,657
197022 Seattle city, WA......... 530,831 83.6 6,350
23 Jacksonville city, FL *.. 528,865 766.0 690
198022 Jacksonville city, FL *.. 540,920 759.7 712
23 Seattle city, WA......... 493,846 83.6 5,907
199015 Jacksonville city, FL *.. 635,230 758.7 837
21 Seattle city, WA......... 516,259 83.9 6,153
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/twps0027.html2009 Estimate13 Jacksonville city, FL *.. 807,815 758.7 1,065
25 Seattle city, WA......... 598,541 83.9 7,134
* - consolidated cityIn 1950, Seattle was twice the size of Jacksonville, yet we shared a similar population density. Since then, Seattle has increased their density, without expanding their municipal borders. On the other hand, Jacksonville consolidated with Duval County, abandoned large parts of the original city and embraced demolition. Thus, today, Seattle is a significantly larger urban community.
My point in posting is that it really is just a difference of vision. Seattle has one. We don't. I think Ralph has it right.
Seattle has always been a larger urban community than Jacksonville. However, I agree with the end of your overall point. Jacksonville still needs to determine what it wants to be. Judging from Seattle's mass transit plans, residents there have at least determined that they want efficient and effective mass transit options. When it comes to determining a vision of what you want to be locally, population density numbers and urban area sizes of other cities should not matter.