![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgX8hBka44oNSuyJkLJkOtZAwgAN-L9CYRRfpYhxmtrOXUv_62KwWGP6IX0Np-CNxQz38Rf5AMRYVpmkwQjbFfkkbQl26OHejXKhQ1ptInCD2kLHNnLe9JXSuMVP4-9TRblJ2Eu38PSvLHz/s320/5.jpg)
Although I am from a rural area in northern Maine, my dad and his side of the family lived in Boston, so I have had the privilege of experiencing both ends of the spectrum. Even though the architecture wasn’t new to me, traversing it on my own was a different story. Similar to most people the magnitude of buildings like the Prudential Center and Hancock building helped in referencing where I was in relation to where I was going. The architecture of the city is vast which offers people a lot to do in it, but at the same time it is much more congested then the openness of a rural town, which at times can have a sense of confinement.
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