Neither particularly ostentatious nor excessively modest, Sector VI exudes a quiet confidence befitting both the commoners and the nouveau riche nobility who have settled there. The homes here are not quite so tightly packed as in the less elegant districts of the city, nor are they quite as free-standing as the homes of the truly wealthy. Instead, these houses are clean and well-ordered in a careful grid pattern, built from pale stones standing in uniform rows and decorated with pretty balconies that house potted plants and hanging vines. The streets are wide and lined with communal fountains, and there are many small plazas where neighbours gather to exchange gossip and stories about their day. Homes have small, well-tended gardens that offer a touch of nature in the urban expanse, and public spaces are designed with both comfort and practicality in mind: there is always a place to sit and talk with a friend. With its blend of common and noble citizens, there is a sense of friendliness in the area that is not always so common in the other city sectors and yet, within that, always a mild sensation of the quiet superiority that comes from knowing one has the wealth to afford such comforts.