Page 5 - July Market Update
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For nightlife, they based
this factor on the number
of nightclubs and bars
listed on Yelp and TripAd-
visor, and then worked
out the number of such es-
tablishments per 100,000
people in each city.
A similar data analysis
was also conducted on
marijuana consumption,
using raw data from the
Weed Index and calculat-
ing how many metric tons
of marijuana is consumed
per 100,000 people each
year.
As well, country-wide sta-
tistics on cocaine use from
the United Nations Of-
fice on Drugs and Crime
and alcohol consumption The title of the second wildest Canadian city went to Calgary, followed by Ot-
from the World Health tawa, Montreal and Toronto.
Organization were applied
to each city evaluated. Two West Coast cities made the top of the list, with Seattle ranked at fourth
Each city was then ranked (Score: 2.51) and San Francisco at fifth (Score: 2.49).
from 0 to 3, with 0 being
“completely tame” and
3 deemed as “absolutely Here are the wildest Canadian cities in the ranking:
bonkers.”
• Vancouver (Score: 2.11; 27th world)
MoveHub’s final scores
for each of the 112 cities • Calgary (Score: 2.05; 35th world)
assessed ranged from the • Ottawa (Score: 2.00; 39th world)
low of 0.12 for Jakarta to
the high of 2.83 for Man- • Montreal (Score: 1.99; 42nd world)
chester. • Toronto (Score: 1.96; 45th world)
410 Worst Neigh- 410 Best Neigh-
bourhoods to Buy bourhoods to Buy
a Condo in Greater a Condo in the
Vancouver in 2018 Greater Vancouver
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