Megalopolis
A megalopolis (or megapolis) is defined as an extensive metropolitan area or a long chain of roughly continuous metropolitan areas. The term was first used in the United States by Jean Gottmann in 1957, to describe the huge metropolitan area along the Eastern seaboard of the U.S. from Boston, Massachusetts, New York City and Washington, D.C. According to Gottmann, it resulted from changes in work and social habits. The concept was later extended to include the following regions: BosWash (Boston–Washington), ChiPitts (Chicago to Pittsburgh), Quebec City–Windsor Corridor, SanSan, and Bajalta California. A megalopolis is also frequently a megacity, megapolitan area, or a metropolitan area with a total population in excess of 10 million people.
Megalopolis is used in urban studies as a term to link the metropolitan Combined Statistical Areas of Boston–Worcester–Manchester, MA–RI–NH; Springfield, MA–Holyoke, MA, Hartford–West Hartford–Willimantic, CT; New York–Newark–Bridgeport, NY–NJ–CT–PA; Philadelphia–Camden–Vineland, PA–NJ–DE–MD; and Washington–Baltimore–Northern Virginia, DC–MD–VA–WV.
The Pittsburgh–Chicago Corridor is an urban studies term that describes the area running through the Rust Belt from the Mid-Atlantic States to the Western Great Lakes region, although great spans of agricultural land and woodlots separates the urban areas. Within this megalopolis, the Steel City Corridor describes the area connecting Cleveland to Pittsburgh via Youngstown and Warren, Ohio, and Sharon–Farrell–New Castle, Pennsylvania. Historically, these areas are known as the Steel Valleys (along the Mahoning and Shenango rivers).
Modern interlinked ground transportation corridors, such as rail and highway, often aid in the development of megalopolises.
Extension of term
This article possibly contains original research. (April 2008) |
Although U.S.-based demographers did not look beyond the U.S. and Canada, there exists roughly the same concept and structures worldwide, namely "long chains of roughly continuous metropolitan areas". A 2005 study by The Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech attempted to create strict, contemporary criteria for definition as a megalopolis or megaregion; within the United States, the criteria included cultural links, commuting patterns, a contiguous regional configuration, and a population within a precisely defined area of at least 10 million.[1] The study identified 10 areas in the U.S. that would meet this strict definition of a present or emergent megalopolis.
The concept exists conceptually in other nations, though not always called by the U.S. term megalopolis. The following is a list of dense, built up areas of multiple large cities each with suburbs that coalesce into one large urban zone or corridor, with few or little rural areas in between. Like U.S. megalopolises, they often have a strong interlinked ground transportation backbone (rail, highway, etc.) aiding in their growth. In nighttime aerial photographs, these areas are artificially lit and stand out from their surroundings. They can be thought of as a worldwide (non-U.S. centric) extension of the term megalopolis.
This is a list of continuously built up areas. Population estimates are a general guide, but the criteria are not meant for comparison. Significant variation applies when comparing chains of metropolitan areas – as there can be several metropolitan areas definitions even for the same city – and methods differ from city to city, nation to nation, and year to year.
- Taiheiyō Belt – Ibaraki, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Shizuoka, Aichi, Gifu, Mie, Osaka, Hyogo, Wakayama, Okayama, Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Fukuoka, and Oita in Japan. (roughly 82.9 million)
- Boston–Providence–Hartford–Manchester–New York–Newark–Philadelphia–Wilmington–Baltimore–Washington D.C., known as BosWash or the Northeast Corridor, the most populous and largely developed area in the Western Hemisphere (55 million)
- Green Bay–Milwaukee–Chicago–Indianapolis–Rockford–Madison–Grand Rapids–Detroit/Windsor–Fort Wayne–Toledo–Cleveland–Columbus–Cincinnati–Pittsburgh–Erie–Buffalo–Toronto–Hamilton, known as ChiPitts and previously known as the Rust Belt (54 million)
- São Paulo–Campinas–Santos–Sorocaba–Jundiaí–São José dos Campos–Taubaté in Brazil (29 million)
- Mexico City (plus 60 municipalities in the State of Mexico and Tizayuca, Hidalgo) in Mexico (over 21 million)
- Beijing–Tianjin–Tangshan in China (23 million, all other Hebei cities excluded)
- Jakarta–Depok–Bogor–Tangerang–Bekasi (Jabodetabek)-Purwakarta–Bandung in Indonesia (28 million)
- Ayutthaya–Bangkok–Pattaya–Chon Buri–Nakhon Ratchasima in Thailand contains approx. over 20 million
- West coast of Taiwan, from Taipei to Kaohsiung (18 million)
- Rhine-Ruhr in the western part of Germany (approx. 10 million incl. Cologne, Düsseldorf, Dortmund)
- The Randstad in the west (including Brabantse Stedenrij) of the Netherlands (approx. 10.5 million)
- Most of South Korea (Incheon–Seoul–Daejon–Daegu–Busan) (32 million)
- Delhi–New Delhi–Gurgaon–Faridabad–Noida–Ghaziabad, India (18 million)
- Cairo–Giza-Kalyoubia (Greater Cairo), Egypt (16 million)
- Los Angeles–Ventura–San Bernardino–Riverside–Orange, collectively known as Greater Los Angeles, includes the 5-county region of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area, the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario Metropolitan Area, and the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura Metro Area and includes 17.7 million residents[2].
- San Francisco–Oakland–San Jose–Monterey–Salinas–Santa Rosa–Napa Valley–Sacramento–Stockton–Modesto–Fresno, California known as the Bay Area (San Francisco and Monterey) and outlying areas in Northern California; (11 million)
- Kolkata–Asansol, India (20 million)
- Mumbai–Pune, India (25 million)
- Lagos–Ibadan–Cotonou, including Porto Novo and Abeokuta, Nigeria (22 million)
- Extended Golden Horseshoe - London–Tillsonburg–Ingersoll–Woodstock–Kitchener/Waterloo–Guelph–Brantford–Hamilton–Greater Toronto Area–Oshawa/Whitby–Barrie–Peterborough–Cobourg–Niagara Falls, ON/NY–Buffalo (11 million, <9 million in ON, >2 million in NY)
- Metro Manila, Philippines (11 million)
- Quebec City–Windsor Corridor (17 million - Canadian population only; >25 million if U.S. border cities within 100 km included)
- The Gauteng City Region (PWV), which includes the urbanised portion of Gauteng Province (Johannesburg, Pretoria and the Vaal Triangle, with a population of over 10 million), and urban areas outside the province which are functionally linked, such as Witbank-Middelburg, Secunda, Rustenburg, and Potchefstroom-Klerksdorp, pushing the population up to between 15 and 20 million [3] [4] [5]
- Buenos Aires Metropolitan area–Greater La Plata–Greater Rosario–Santa Fe–Paraná, in Argentina along the Paraná and Rio de la Plata rivers (17 million).
- Chicago–Milwaukee–Madison–Rockford–South Bend (14 million)
- Istanbul–Bursa–Çanakkale, Turkey with at least 17 million people. This is an example of a transcontinental megalopolis and Istanbul is a transcontinental city, since both cover land in both Asia and Europe.
- Metropolitan Area of Bogota (Bogota,Soacha,Funza,Tenjo,Chia,Cajica,Zipaquira,Facatativa, Briseño, Sopo, mosquera) (more than 9 Million)
- Katowice–Kraków–Ostrava, Poland and Czech Republic (about 7 million)
Emergent or potential megalopolis
This article possibly contains original research. (June 2008) |
Australia
- South East Queensland - Brisbane (1.8 million), the Gold and Sunshine coasts, (584,000 and 230,000), as well as the cities of Ipswich (140,000), Redcliffe (51,000), Logan (173,000), Caloundra (88,000) and several urban shires.[6][7] The urban area is growing to the point where it has almost attached the city of Toowoomba, Queensland (123k).[6]
- New South Wales - Newcastle (524,000) Sydney (4.3 million) and Wollongong (280,000).[6] Little separates these three cities.
- Victoria - Geelong (170,000), Melbourne (3.8 million).[6] Both of these have the potential to join up as urban sprawl increases.
Brazil
- São Paulo–Campinas–Santos–Rio de Janeiro–Belo Horizonte, in Brazil, with approximately 49 million inhabitants (includes the Sorocaba, Jundiaí, São José dos Campos, Taubaté, Volta Redonda, Juiz de Fora, Barbacena, Conselheiro Lafaiete, Divinopolis, Campos dos Goytacazes areas).
Canada
- Quebec City–Windsor Corridor - Is the densest populated area in Canada with over 17 million people.(2001 Census)
- Vancouver-Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Though not a perfect Megalopolis the large cities of seattle and vancouver are slowly drifting together [8]
China
- The Pearl River Delta (PRD) in Guangdong region, China could be considered a megalopolis, as it is dense and contains 11 cities including Hong Kong (7 million), Macau (0.5 million), Guangzhou (over 10 million), Shenzhen (over 7 million), Zhuhai (1.3 million), Dongguan (6.6 million), Foshan (5.5 million), Jiangmen (4.1 million), parts of Zhaoqing (3.4 million), parts of Huizhou (3.3 million) and Zhongshan (2.4 million).[citation needed] (Total 50 million, migrant workers included)
- The Yangtze River Delta between southern Jiangsu province and northern Zhejiang, China could also be considered a megalopolis, though less developed compared to the Pearl River Delta. It contains at least 16 cities including Shanghai (over 15 million), Nanjing (6.4 million), Hangzhou (6.4 million), Ningbo (5.5 million), Nantong (7.7 million), Suzhou (6.1 million), Taizhou (5.5 million), Taizhou (5.0 million), Yangzhou (4.5 million), Wuxi (4.5 million), Shaoxing (4.4 million), Changzhou (3.5 million), Jiaxing (3.3 million), Zhenjiang (2.7 million), Huzhou (2.6 million) and Zhoushan (1 million). (Total 80 million)
- The central Liaoning city cluster in China. Within 150 km from its center Shenyang (7.2 million), it has Fushun (3 million), Anshan (3.6 million), Benxi (1.5 million), Liaoyang (1.8 million), Yingkou (2.2 million), Panjin (1.2 million), and Tieling (3.4 million), with a total population of 23 million. And it can be further extended to Dalian (6.2 million), Fuxin (2 million) and Dandong (2.4 million). This area used to be the most industrialized region in China. It declined during 1980s-1990s, but in recent years, it rapidly revives.[citation needed]
Europe
- The multinational Blue Banana (Banane bleue in French, Blaue Banane in German, and Blauwe Banaan in Dutch) stretching from the conurbations of the West Midlands (region), North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber (around 6 million) and then through London (14 million) all in the United Kingdom, across the English Channel, through Paris (12 million), France, the Lille-Kortrijk-Tournai Euregion (1.8 million), France and Belgium, the Flemish Diamond (5.5 million), Belgium, the Randstad (the Brabantse Stedenrij and Knooppunt Arnhem-Nijmegen agglomerations included) (10.5 million), Netherlands, the Gronau–Enschede Euregion (3.2 million), Germany and the Netherlands the Meuse-Rhine Euregion (3.9 million), Belgium, Netherlands and Germany, the Rhine-Ruhr in Germany, Frankfurt Rhine Main Area (5.3 million), Germany, Basel metropolitan area (around 700.000 people), Switzerland, Zurich metropolitan area (1.3 million), Switzerland, to Milan (9 million) and Turin (2,5 million), Italy (Total around 85 million) (also called European Megalopolis).[citation needed]
Japan
- The megalopolis of the Pacific coast is connected from the Greater Tokyo to Kyushu by the Shinkansen and the highway. The distance is 1,200km and is called the Taiheiyo Belt.
Mexico
- The Megalopolis of central Mexico was defined to be integrated by the metropolitan areas of Mexico City, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Toluca and Pachuca. The megalopolis of central Mexico is integrated by 173 municipalities (91 of the state of Mexico, 29 of the state of Puebla, 37 of the state of Tlaxcala, 16 of Morelos and 16 of Hidalgo) and the 16 boroughs of the Federal District,[7] with an approximate total population of almost 25 million people.
United States
- The Northeast Megalopolis, nicknamed "BosWash", extends from Boston to Washington, D.C.. Some of the cities included in this chain are Boston, Providence, Hartford, New Haven, New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Alexandria, Virginia, plus the urban county of Arlington, Virginia.
- Studies by two U.S. universities – Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech – identify much of the southern two thirds of Florida as an emergent megalopolis, which the Virginia Tech study calls "Peninsula". It includes the core metropolitan areas of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, Melbourne, Orlando, Daytona Beach, Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Fort Myers, along with suburban and rural counties linked through economic and commuting patterns.[9][1] As of 2005[update], the population of the region is 13.7 million.[1]
- The I-85 Corridor in the Southeastern United States: the same pair of studies define this areas as an "emergent" megalopolis including the primary cities of Birmingham, Atlanta, Greenville, Spartanburg, Charlotte, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Durham and Raleigh.[10] Both studies refer to the area as the Piedmont megalopolis; the Georgia Tech survey defines the region narrowly, focusing on the urban, suburban and rural counties between Birmingham and Raleigh. The Virginia Tech study proposes a broader definition, which would also include Columbus, Macon, Huntsville, Augusta, Columbia, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Johnson City, Asheville and a number of smaller cities; the western extent of this definition is somewhat disconnected by the Appalachian mountain range. Both reports highlight the "emergent" nature of this possible megalopolis, noting comparatively low urban densities, but also noting a pattern in growth (in the individual, component urban areas) towards each other. As of 2005[update], this region (as defined in the Virginia Tech study) has a population of 19 million [10][1].
- The I-35 Corridor in Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas beginning in San Antonio (2.0 million) and extending through Austin–Round Rock (1.6 million), Temple–Killeen (350,000), Waco (225,000), Dallas-Fort Worth (6.0 million), Oklahoma City (1.3 million), Tulsa (850,000), Wichita, Kansas (550,000), and the bi-state Kansas City Metropolitan Area (2.0 million).[11] As of 2005[update], the population of this region is 15.2 million.[1]
- The I-70 Corridor in Kansas, Missouri, and Illinois, including the cities of Topeka, Kansas (226,268), Lawrence, Kansas (112,123) and Columbia, Missouri (162,314), plus Greater St. Louis (3.0 million) and the Kansas City Metropolitan Area (2.0 million) is another potential megalopolis[1].
- The Gulf Coast corridor along I-10 in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama beginning in Houston (5.5 million) and extending through Beaumont–Port Arthur, Texas (383,443), Lake Charles, Louisiana (192,316), Lafayette, Louisiana (254,432), Baton Rouge (790,000), New Orleans (1.3 million), Gulfport–Biloxi, Mississippi (396,784), and Mobile, Alabama (540,258).[12] The Virginia Tech study, which refers to this region as the Gulf Coast megalopolis, expands this definition somewhat, focusing on an area streching from Brownsville, Texas to Panama City in Florida, encompassing a total population of 13 million.
- The Front Range Urban Corridor centered on Denver–Boulder, Colorado, and extending north through Fort Collins and Greeley, Colorado, and Cheyenne, Wyoming, south through Colorado Springs and Pueblo[9].
- California's Bay Area and Central Valley; this region, with a total population of 13 million, is referred to as NorCal in the Virginia Tech study, and includes the Bay Area, the Monterey area, and a sizable portion of California's Central Valley and Sierra foothills; the region (which largely corresponds to the most developed portions of the Sacramento and San Joaquin drainage basins) also extends eastward to include Carson City and Reno in Nevada. Apart from the Bay Area cities, core cities in this region would include Sacramento, Monterey, Stockton, Modesto, Salinas, Fresno and Reno, and are primarily linked by Interstates 5 and 80, and California's route 99[1].
- Southern California (or Bajalta California), with over 25 million residents (22 million in the State of California[13] region and over 3 million in northern Baja California, Mexico) from the area including Los Angeles--Riverside--San Bernardino--Orange--Ventura--San Diego--Santa Barbara--Imperial County, plus Tijuana, Mexicali and Ensenada, Mexico.
- Cascadia, which includes the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia, Canada centred on the city of Vancouver and Bellingham, Washington, Everett-Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia, Washington, Portland–Vancouver, Salem, Oregon, Albany–Corvallis, Oregon, and Eugene–Springfield, Oregon[9]. As of 2005[update], the total population of this region is 7.4 million.
- The Northstar Corridor, which includes the Minneapolis-Saint Paul metro area and the communities along I-94 and U.S. Route 10 between the St. Cloud metro area and Minneapolis-Saint Paul, including Elk River, Monticello, Big Lake Clearwater, Clear Lake and the St. Cloud area. The corridor has a population of approximately 3.6 million and is one of the fastest-growing areas in the United States.[citation needed]
See also
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Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g MegaCensusReport.indd
- ^ "Combined Statistical Area Population Estimates File for Internet Display". US Census Bureau. 2006. Retrieved 2008-04-14.
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(help) - ^ http://www.joburg.org.za/2006/aug/aug30_globalcity.stm
- ^ http://www.joburg.org.za/2006/july/jul20_cityregion.stm
- ^ M Shilowa to debate Gauteng's position on global city region, 29 Aug
- ^ a b c d "3218.0 - Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2006-07". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2008-03-31. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
- ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Ipswich City (Statistical Subdivision)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2008-07-14. Map
Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Redcliffe City (Statistical Subdivision)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2008-07-14. Map
Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Logan City (Statistical Subdivision)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2008-07-14. Map
Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Caloundra (C) (Local Government Area)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2008-07-14. Map - ^ "Stats Canada". 2001.
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(help) - ^ a b c Georgia Institute of Technology :: CQGRD : MegaRegions
- ^ a b Georgia Institute of Technology :: CQGRD : MegaRegions
- ^ MegaCensusReport.indd
- ^ USATODAY.com - Population boom spawns super cities
- ^ Population statistics for California counties