Metairie - Louisiana - 4K Downtown Drive

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  • Опубліковано 11 січ 2022
  • Afternoon drive around the CDP of Metairie just west of New Orleans. If incorporated, Metairie would rank as the third largest city in the state of Louisiana.
    Filmed: December 2021
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    From Wikipedia:
    Metairie (/ˈmɛtəri/ MET-ər-ee) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, United States, and is part of the New Orleans metropolitan area. With a population of 143,507 in 2020, Metairie is the largest community in Jefferson Parish and was (as of 2010) the fifth-largest CDP in the United States. It is an unincorporated area that (as of 2020) would have been Louisiana's third-largest city had it been incorporated.
    The 1947 Fort Lauderdale hurricane, with winds of 125 mph (201 km/h), directly hit Metairie. Much of the community was under 6 feet (1.8 m) of water.
    Hurricane Betsy, a Category Three storm, hit the area in 1965, causing extensive wind damage and moderate flooding. In 1995 the May 8th 1995 Louisiana flood, which dumped upwards of 20 inches (510 mm) of rain into Metairie in a twelve-hour period, also flooded some parts of the region, especially areas south and west of Metairie, including Kenner, Harahan, and River Ridge.
    In 1990, Metairie made history when one of its districts elected white supremacist David Duke to the Louisiana state legislature for a single term. On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina caused a new migration from Orleans Parish, because housing was needed to replace what had been destroyed in the flooding of the city. It has been a racially neutral migration, with equal numbers of black and white residents moving to Jefferson Parish. The 2010 census showed that Metairie has increasingly become more diverse.
    Veterans Boulevard was laid out alongside a drainage canal, and became a commercial center of the region. The central business district of Metairie is located on Causeway Boulevard near Lake Pontchartrain. Metairie also has one of the handful of major malls located in the New Orleans metro area. Lakeside Shopping Center is the highest-grossing mall in the New Orleans metropolitan area. In the 1970s and early 1980s, an area of bars and nightclubs opened in a section of Metairie known as "Fat City", which is now the most racially diverse area in the New Orleans metropolitan area and is home to a vibrant restaurant scene. Several New Orleans radio and television stations have transmitter facilities in Metairie and Jefferson Parish; two of them, WGNO-TV and WNOL, now have studios and main offices in Metairie. Metairie has a large Mardi Gras season that touts itself as more family-friendly than the New Orleans Mardi Gras.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 53

  • @lesliemiros6743
    @lesliemiros6743 Рік тому +3

    Actually the area is called Old Metairie which is along Metairie Road and Downtown Metairie is actually along North Causeway Blvd. up to 5th Street by the Lakeway Towers complex just north of the Lakeside Shopping Center to the north and down toward Jefferson Hwy to the south near Shrewsbury and Old Jefferson.

  • @kellyvariste4831
    @kellyvariste4831 2 роки тому +6

    Yay! Thank you Mike for the videos this my old stomping ground it's nice to see that suburban New Orleans looks to be in somewhat decent shape. Growing up in the New Orleans area living in Metairie was at that time making a statement before Katrina. I used to live right off transcontinental and veterans I loved it! But it's definitely not the same anymore the north shore is now New Orleans' premier bedroom community as it should be the south shore suburbs has seen its glory days.

    • @MileageMikeTravels
      @MileageMikeTravels  2 роки тому

      You're welcome. I read that a lot of people from New Orleans moved here after Katrina.

    • @kellyvariste4831
      @kellyvariste4831 2 роки тому +2

      @@MileageMikeTravels Are you referring to the outer suburbs in general or Metairie in particular? If so yes that is true much to the chagrin of the people who lived there on the eastbank suburbs. Because prior to Katrina to was very segregated back in the day it wasn't until the 80's and 90's places like Metairie, Kenner, and Harahan became more integrated as the North shore became more envogue. Now as more New Orleanians are coming back home and being priced out of the city Metairie and Kenner is seeing more of a shift in it's demographics and I must say the energy has changed so dramatically in the New Orleans area in general I don't quite know how to feel about it. I love my hometown but I don't love it enough to go back.

    • @arceneaux66
      @arceneaux66 11 місяців тому +1

      Grew up right down transcontinental past w napoleon, on the clearview side. Left after Katrina. Always thought I’d move back but have changed my mind. Just not the same when I visit. Does it look dirtier, or was it alway like that and was just all I knew.

    • @kellyvariste4831
      @kellyvariste4831 11 місяців тому

      @@arceneaux66 It's a combination of both. Suburban New Orleans is like New Orleans lite it's all the same we just didn't know any better at the time. Now we've grown up and been away for a while we can now see it for what it's always been a shithole. I'll always call New Orleans metro my home but my heart's not in it like it used to be.

  • @Nowhere888
    @Nowhere888 Місяць тому

    Thanks for posting this. Our family had to leave New Orleans when Avondale shipyard closed since my dad was in the merchant marine. New Orleans was my childhood home and this video is about all I have left of it. I miss New Orleans but I don't miss my dad since he was a mean, abusive drunk. I think I have been in nearly every bar in Metaire looking for my dad when he went on his week long benders.

  • @Spang06
    @Spang06 Рік тому +2

    Wow @ 14:40 and 19:30 is where I went to high school. Haven't seen the place in years. Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Or in the case Severn Ave. 😄

    • @lesliemiros6743
      @lesliemiros6743 Рік тому

      You used to attend Archbishop Rummel High School? I went to East Jefferson High School back in 1990.

  • @YPACASNC
    @YPACASNC 2 роки тому +3

    Look beautiful out there!!!

  • @brianwhite1189
    @brianwhite1189 Місяць тому

    Really enjoyed the video. Looks like a nice place for a slower, more relaxing life with NO nearby if you need a little more excitement.

  • @NetteMarie
    @NetteMarie Місяць тому

    It's nice and clean

  • @richard51
    @richard51 Рік тому +5

    I have lived in Metairie for 71 years and never found a downtown Metairie. Main reason is, that it is not a town, village, or city. It is just uninccorporated Jefferson Parish. No downtown no Main St. Just a bunch of neighborhoods that grew together. It has some areas that are snobbier than others, like the Old Metairie neighborhoods but overall it is only the east bank's version of the westbank. Crappy drained swamp.

    • @TheDroppedAnchor
      @TheDroppedAnchor Рік тому

      You have the voice of experience. This is the very best description of Metry I've ever heard.

    • @user-zy3zd3sx2d
      @user-zy3zd3sx2d 9 місяців тому

      Then you remember before and after Lakeside Shopping Center went up and Schwegmann's. Marsh hunting.

    • @user-zy3zd3sx2d
      @user-zy3zd3sx2d 3 місяці тому

      Veteran's would be considered its main street, which was lined with commercial businesses. Crime up mid-70s.

  • @julinalilly7439
    @julinalilly7439 2 роки тому +2

    What a beautiful city this is

  • @ramirolezcano5539
    @ramirolezcano5539 Рік тому +1

    FELICITACIONES A MILEAGE MIKE, POR TAN LINDO VÍDEO. ESTE VÍDEO HACE DE ESTADOS UNIDOS UNA GRAN NACION, CON SUS ESTADOS Y CIUDADES MUY BELLÍSIMOS. ESTE SALUDO VA DESDE NICARAGUA.

  • @ireece
    @ireece 2 роки тому +2

    Awesome 👍

  • @user-zy3zd3sx2d
    @user-zy3zd3sx2d 3 місяці тому

    What places were interesting are long gone. Pontchartrain Beach: gone, Schweggman's Giant Supermarket: gone etc.

  • @silverhawk24
    @silverhawk24 2 роки тому

    Great video Louisiana Mike enjoyed it a lot

  • @terrellmackvideos
    @terrellmackvideos 2 роки тому

    Try my second home Marrero next please.

  • @edlee2336
    @edlee2336 2 роки тому +3

    Moving here the last week of May. Hoping I like it there, moving from Cleveland which is slightly more progressive than the NOLA area so let’s see how this goes!

    • @MileageMikeTravels
      @MileageMikeTravels  2 роки тому +3

      Definitely better weather (minus the hurricanes).

    • @3amMONDAY
      @3amMONDAY 2 роки тому +1

      Ohio itself is not touching NO

    • @edlee2336
      @edlee2336 2 роки тому +4

      @@3amMONDAY The pay down here is unremarkable low. Cleveland has better paying jobs. New Orleans is more fun hell yeah but you make more money in Ohio.

    • @3amMONDAY
      @3amMONDAY 2 роки тому +1

      @@edlee2336 I’ve made money in OH so I can agree to that. Loads were scarce in LA, however.

    • @midnightmystery544
      @midnightmystery544 2 роки тому +1

      NO is a really different, if you like interesting, you'll like NO

  • @flydragon7256
    @flydragon7256 2 роки тому +8

    Good drive.
    I wouldn't call this downtown, most of Metairie is subruban.

  • @vernawilson1415
    @vernawilson1415 2 роки тому +3

    Is this city surrounded by water

    • @MileageMikeTravels
      @MileageMikeTravels  2 роки тому

      Lake Pontchartrain on the north side and a Canal separating to the East from New Orleans proper.

  • @richard51
    @richard51 Рік тому +6

    I can't believe I am watching this video. There is absolutely nothing interesting or unique about Jefferson Parish. The business areas could be in any part of the USA. No unique resturants, no interesting sights, the local government is oppressive. There is no culture, it just exists because it borders New Orleans which used to be nice, interesting and historical but is now too dangerous to visit, and the crime is moving into Metairie. When I was a kid most of the areas shown were underwater. If the pumps don't go on during rain it will again be underwater. Lots of apartments with a lot of crime. Yes even the snobs in old Metairie will flood without the pumps.

    • @TheDroppedAnchor
      @TheDroppedAnchor Рік тому +1

      After the first two minutes of him being in Old Metry the sides of the road stop having a discernible amount of paint. And except for sixty FEET of a new interchange there is NO iridescent paint at all.
      Up and down the West Coast roads especially in major populated areas have paint which is very bright in the middle of the night. Louisiana for reason does not believe in modern paint.

    • @yossarian6799
      @yossarian6799 5 місяців тому

      I lived Uptown and Mid City (right aroun' da cawna from Mandina's) for most of my years in New Orleans. Coming from an old Colonial town (Easton PA), the "oldness" of New Orleans made me feel at home (and so did Mandina's veal parm and spaghetti). However, I found absolutely nothing of interest in Jefferson Parish. Because it looks somewhat different from most American suburbs, I give it props, but even Long Island is more interesting.
      And I'm learning to re-adapt to NOT having my favorite foods at my beck and call. There's an Italian deli in Philly near my Dr's office that makes authentic muffalettas, and there's an excellent creole-style restaurant, The Bayou, just a few minutes from my home... though I will always contend that they stole my idea for seafood pierogis! But there's nothing up here than can match the sheer heaven of the classic Louisiana fried seafood platter. I'm having serious withdrawals...!

  • @ChefJcase91983
    @ChefJcase91983 2 місяці тому

    Metairie Is not New Orleans