Jump to content

Nairobi City County

Coordinates: 1°17′00″S 36°49′00″E / 1.2833°S 36.8167°E / -1.2833; 36.8167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Nairobi county)

Nairobi City County
Nairobi City Hall
Nairobi City Hall
Coat of arms of Nairobi City County
Location in Kenya
Location in Kenya
Country Kenya
Formed4 March 2013
CapitalNairobi
Sub-counties
Government
 • GovernorSakaja Johnson
 • SenatorEdwin Sifuna
 • County Woman RepresentativeEsther Passaris
Area
 • Total
696.1 km2 (268.8 sq mi)
 • Rank45th
Elevation
1,795 m (5,889 ft)
Population
 (2019)[1]
 • Total
4,397,073
 • Rank1st
 • Density6,300/km2 (16,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+03:00 (EAT)
HDI (2019)0.681[2]
medium
Poverty Rate1.3 %[3]
$1.90/day
Websitenairobi.go.ke

Nairobi City County is one of the 47 counties of Kenya. With an estimated population of 5,454,000 in 2024, it is the third-smallest in area of the counties, yet the most populous. It also serves as the capital of Kenya. The county entity was effected in 2013, replacing Nairobi City Council, which had been the long-standing unit of local administration since before Kenya's independence. The city county consists of eleven gazetted sub-counties and eighty-five electoral wards. On the national level, Nairobi also sends seventeen Members of Parliament across the constituencies, one County Woman Representative to the National Assembly; and one senator to the Senate. The county government, which is allotted devolved functions as stated in the Constitution of Kenya, is headed by a county governor, who appoints his/her cabinet. The county's legislature is headed by the County Speaker, who presides over the County Assembly. The Members of the County Assembly (MCAs) are elected from single-member districts and represent their respective electoral wards. Additional MCAs are also nominated by political parties as a form of affirmative action.

Nairobi City County shares the same boundaries as the former Nairobi Province. Kenya's eight provinces were sub-divided into forty-seven counties as stated in the constitution, based on the forty-seven districts that were established prior to 1992.

On 25 August 2022, after the general elections in Kenya, Johnson Sakaja was sworn-in as the fourth Governor of Nairobi County.[4]

Demographics

[edit]

Based on the population census conducted by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics in 2019, the resident population of Nairobi City County was 4,397,073 within the city proper, the greatest population of any of the counties of Kenya.[5] A breakdown of the population showed that there were 2,192,452 males, 2,204,376 females and 245 intersex individuals.[5] Embakasi Sub-county had the highest population of 988,808, accounting for more than 22% of the total population of the county; Kasarani came in second with 780,656. Kibra Sub-county with an area of 12.1 km2 (4.7 sq mi), had the least population among the sub-counties but had a high population density of 15,311/km2.[6][5] The population density was highest in the sub-county of Mathare with 68,942/km2, followed in a distant second by Kamukunji with 25,455/km2, then Makadara with 16,150/km2, Kibra and Dagoretti with 15,311/km2, and 14,908/km2 respectively.[5] Lang'ata had the lowest population density with 911/km2, with the highest household size of 3.1.[5]

As a whole, Nairobi City had the highest number of households in the country with 1,506,888, with an average household size of 2.9, as well as the highest population density of 6247/km2 against the county's total area of 703.9 km2 (271.8 sq mi).[5]

Religion

[edit]

Religion in Nairobi County [7]

Religion (2019 Census) Number %
Protestant 1,358,985 31.33%
Catholic 1,041,619 24.02%
Evangelical Churches 897,741 20.70%
African Instituted Churches 307,019 7.08%
Orthodox 23,160 0.53%
Other Christian 225,003 5.19%
Total Christian 3,853,527 88.85%
Islam (all branches) 326,809 7.53%
Hindu 38,141 0.88%
Traditionalists 7,029 0.16%
Other 46,401 1.07%
No Religion/Atheists 54,841 1.26%
Don't know 9,047 0.21%
Not stated 1,285 ~
Total 4,337,080 100%

Administrative and electoral boundaries

[edit]

Nairobi is divided into 11 sub-counties, 17 electoral constituencies, and 85 wards.[8]

Constituency Communities Sub-county[9]
Dagoretti North Kilimani · Kawangware · Gatina · Kileleshwa  · Kabiro Westlands/Dagoretti
Dagoretti South Mutu-ini · Ng'ando · Riruta · Uthiru/Ruthimitu · Waithaka Dagoretti
Lang'ata Karen · Nairobi West · Mugumo-ini · South C · Nyayo Highrise · Otiende  · Lang'ata
Kibra Laini Saba · Lindi · Makina · Woodley/ Kenyatta Golf Course · Sarang'ombe Kibra
Kasarani Clay City · Mwiki · Kasarani · Njiru · Ruai  · Kamulu Kasarani/Njiru[a]
Roysambu Roysambu · Garden Estate · Ridgeways · Githurai · Kahawa West · Zimmermann · Kahawa Kasarani
Ruaraka Babadogo · Utalii · Mathare North · Lucky Summer · Korogocho Kasarani
Embakasi Central Kayole North · Kayole North Central · Kayole South · Komarock · Matopeni/ Spring Valley Embakasi
Embakasi East Upper Savanna · Lower Savanna · Embakasi · Utawala · Mihang'o Embakasi[b]
Embakasi North Kariobangi North · Dandora Area I · Dandora Area II · Dandora Area III · Dandora Area IV Embakasi/Kasarani
Embakasi South Imara Daima · Kwa Njenga · Kwa Reuben · Pipeline · Kware Embakasi
Embakasi West Umoja I · Umoja II · Mowlem · Kariobangi South Embakasi/Kamukunji
Kamukunji Pumwani · Eastleigh North · Eastleigh South · Airbase · California Kamukunji
Makadara Maringo/Hamza · Viwandani · Harambee · Makongeni · Mbotela  · Bahati Makadara/Kamukunji
Mathare Hospital · Mabatini · Huruma · Ngei · Mlango Kubwa · Kiamaiko Mathare
Starehe Nairobi Central · Nairobi · Pangani · Ziwani/ Kariokor · Landimawe · Nairobi South Starehe/Makadara
Westlands Kitisuru · Parklands/Highridge · Karura · Kangemi · Mountain View · Westlands

Leadership

[edit]
Term of office Governor's Name Political Party
2013-2017 Evans Kidero ODM
2017-2020 Mike Sonko Jubilee
2021-2022 Anne Kananu N/A
2022-2027 Johnson Arthur Sakaja UDA

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume I: Population by County and Sub-County". knbs.or.ke. Archived from the original on 13 November 2019. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  2. ^ Global Data Lab. "Human Development Indices: Sub-national HDI". globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  3. ^ "Sub-national HDI – Area Database – World Poverty Clock". WorldPoverty.io. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  4. ^ "Sakaja sworn in as the 4th Governor of Nairobi City County. | Nairobi City County". 25 August 2022. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume I: Population by County and Sub-County". KNBS. pp. 20, 29, 38. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  6. ^ "Embakasi and Kasarani most populated areas in Nairobi". The Standard. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  7. ^ "2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume IV: Distribution of Population by Socio-Economic Characteristics" (PDF). Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  8. ^ [1] Archived 19 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "2019 Population By County and Sub-county". Archived from the original on 13 November 2019. Retrieved 30 May 2021.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Kasarani Sub-county mainly uses the boundaries of the Kasarani Division prior to 2013. Ruai, Njiru and Kamulu are in Njiru Sub-county
  2. ^ Mihang'o and Utawala are in Njiru Sub-county
[edit]

1°17′00″S 36°49′00″E / 1.2833°S 36.8167°E / -1.2833; 36.8167