At risk of being off topic I have to add that when Linda told her friends she was moving to Birmingham they were horrified.
Same happened to me.
I was born in London just over 60 years ago (1949). I lived and worked in London for the first 30 years of my life.
I worked for a huge computer company (one of the biggest in the world) and in the very late 1970s (1979) they decided to open a new office on the Hagley Road and asked for people to come and work there.
My marriage was in a shaky position so my wife and I decided agreed to move from London to Birmingham.
Like Linda you mention, my colleagues were horrified and many of them tried to talk me put of moving.
But I moved to Birmingham in late 1979 (to Four Oaks) but then got divorced a few years later and now live in Shirley, Solihull (so not quite Birmingham).
I got out and about and got to know the city and its history very well, so I know probably know more about Birmingham than my wife who was born here.
I go out with my camera a lot and have taken many pictures of the city centre and the suburbs.
I cant say I love the city, to me there are far to many areas of it that are average, or even very poor, with many areas (some near the city centre) full of small factories and small boring offices.
But I do promote it on places like Trip Advisor, even though it is often hard work.
I have taken many interesting historic pictures of Birmingham.
Here is a set of pictures I took in the 1980s of the area around Broad St while they were redeveloping the whole area including the Convention Centre and the Symphony Hall
https://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=1054565
And here are the pictures I am currently taking of the Eastside area redevelopment
https://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=1024483
And here is a set of pictures I took in the area behind Snow Hill station, which to me was a very sad walk and an example of how Birmingham does not look after its buildings.
https://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=1415172
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