[hider=Hub City notes] Hupert Square Named for the founder of the town, Hupert Square is the primary business district of Hub City. Filled with office buildings, law firms, and clinics as well as upper middle class housing. In the center of the district is Gaston Hupert Memorial Park, a small park dedicated to the founder of Hub City, Gaston Hupert, who was killed by Native Americans not long after founding the city. A statue of Hupert laying claim to Hub City is erected in the center of the park. Jury Street Once a residential street officially part of Hupert Square, Jury Street has grown enough to become its own district, extending out into the city limits. Primarily composed of high end housing with mansions further out of the city, this is where most of the criminal elite and politicians in Hub City live. The size of some of the houses are only matched by the decadence of the residents. The Wedge Officially Meadowview Heights, a residential district of Hub City filled with townhouses, apartment complexes, and locally owned stores. The Wedge is nicknamed as such because its shape on most municipal maps is like a wedge of cheese. The district was primarily a multicultural boiling pot at the turn of the 20th century, where all the blacks, Jews, Native Americans, Hispanics, Italians and Irish lived. Its population is still just as diverse even all these years later. Lucifer's Corner Officially Gordon's Corner, named for Gaston Hupert's right hand man Isaac Gordon, who took over the title of the city's mayor after Hupert's death. The district has garnered the nickname Lucifer's Corner for its reputation as a hotbed for criminals, be they street gangs, mobsters, drug dealers, or so on. It is composed of brick tenement buildings and condemned businesses. Most people stay away from Lucifer's Corner out of fear for their lives. Hupert River An industrial district stretching out for a few miles beyond the city, Hupert River is named as such because of the river that flows straight through it. Composed of factories, power plants, and rail yards, not far from these factories are houses and trailer parks, home to the workers and their families. At night, it's a popular spot for criminals to conduct business. Dumping bodies into the river, drug deals, weapon trades; you name it, it's happened. Chinatown Officially Logan's Port, named for Arthur Logan, the man who pushed the Union Pacific through Hub City, Chinatown is named as such because, well... You get three guesses and the first two don't count. Originally a campsite for the Chinese railroad workers, Chinatown was built up into a series of tenement buildings, apartments, and houses over the years. Its population has a 50 to 1 ratio of Asian Americans to any other race. A hotbed for the Triads. [/hider]