City in Washington, United States
Vancouver is a city in Clark County, Washington, United States, located on the north bank of the Columbia River. It had a population of 190,915 at the 2020 census, making it the fourth-most populous city in Washington. Founded in 1825 and incorporated in 1857, the city was originally established around Fort Vancouver, a fur trading outpost, and is situated directly north of Portland, Oregon, along the Washington–Oregon state line. Vancouver serves as the county seat of Clark County and is part of the Portland metropolitan area.Wikipedia
The Pacific Northwest occupies a unique niche in American geography — major cities set against volcanic peaks, temperate rainforests, and wild coastline that remain accessible without leaving the metro area. Seattle has become one of the most globally significant tech cities, anchor to Amazon, Microsoft, and a dense ecosystem of aerospace and cloud computing. Portland's creative culture and compact geography made it a darling of the livability rankings, though the city has faced real urban challenges in recent years around homelessness and downtown vitality.
The signature trade-off is the weather. Winters are mild but persistently grey and wet — the sun doesn't return in full force until June — and those who move from sunnier climates often underestimate how the darkness affects daily mood. Those who adapt find the summers genuinely spectacular: reliably dry, long, and set against a landscape of extraordinary beauty. Secondary cities — Bend, Spokane, Eugene, Bellingham — offer more affordable entry points into the Pacific Northwest lifestyle with less urban density.
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