View Full Version : The population of these cities correct??


Mr Bricks
May 18th, 2005, 07:08 PM
London: 7.1 million 14 million in metro.
Paris: 2.2 million 11.1 million in metro.
Istanbul: 10 million 12.6 million in metro.(+poor people not registered)
NYC: 8.1 million 21.8 million in metro(i´m not sure if it´s that much).(+poor people not registered)
Tokyo: 12 million 33.7 million in metro.
Moscow: 10.3 million 11.8 million in metro.(+poor people not registered) I have read somewhere the there is 29 million people in moscow´s metro area but i´m not certain.
Shanghai: 9.1 million 13(or 16) million in metro.(+poor people not registered)
This is the information i got on the internet, i just want to know if this information is correct.

Zaqattaq
May 18th, 2005, 08:03 PM
go to emporis.com and look up the cities

rocky
May 18th, 2005, 08:05 PM
oh . this has been discussed many times.
for london some say 12; 14; 18 in the metro. (i think 12 or 14 is more accurate).
Paris is right: 11.5 i think.
Moscow i heard has more because of rapid growth.

London_2006
May 18th, 2005, 08:53 PM
London's 18mn metro is an official govt. figure.

rocky
May 18th, 2005, 09:24 PM
HAHAHA !
ok 18 is the number for the nationalistic english;) and 12 or 14 for the normal people HAHA

vincebjs
May 18th, 2005, 09:29 PM
18 million for London must be including all of southeast England.

That's just as bad as NYC's 21.8 million figure, which includes counties all the way in Pennsylvania!

UN Urban Area numbers are probably more uniform and reasonable.

Azn_chi_boi
May 18th, 2005, 11:32 PM
Paris city is 2.1 million. NYC metro looks right

Küsel
May 18th, 2005, 11:56 PM
They are quite correct numbers.

London metro is about 12, 18 is the economic area and 22 is South East England. Moscow I think included now also most of its suburbs outside the ring motorway that was once its border and has 13mio within the city proper (but I am also not sure).

Shanghai: it is a municipality of 6000 km2 and has some 13mio in it, but not all in the urban area which is between 9 and 12.

Quite well defined since the 40s I think is Sao Paulo: city proper (about 1600 km2): 10.2mio, metro (Grande Sao Paulo, ca 8000 km2 - Santos and Campinas NOT included): 18.5 mio.

Mr Bricks
May 19th, 2005, 03:48 PM
ok...thanks

Onur
May 19th, 2005, 06:26 PM
İstanbul is true.

[Everywhen]
May 20th, 2005, 06:06 AM
pop. figures for 2005

london city 7 421 228 metro 11 327 857

Paris 2 110 694 metro 11 501 738

Madrid 3 102 644 - 6 163 198

Barcelona 1 570 378 - 4 973 001

Tōkyō 8 336 611 -31 480 498

New York 8 108 040 -22 313 756

Chicago 2 841 962 -9 418 269

Los Angeles 3 877 139 -17 542 967

Moscow 10 381 288 -11 846 595

Saint Petersburg 4 039 751 -4 784 261

Peking 7 490 618 -11 244 673

Shanghai 12 762 953 -13 909 622

Ankara 3 519 177 -3 567 972

İstanbul 9 797 536 -11 588 545

Toronto 4 612 187 -6 040 829

rocky
May 20th, 2005, 08:30 AM
']pop. figures for 2005

london city 7 421 228 metro 11 327 857

Paris 2 110 694 metro 11 501 738

Madrid 3 102 644 - 6 163 198

Barcelona 1 570 378 - 4 973 001

Tōkyō 8 336 611 -31 480 498

New York 8 108 040 -22 313 756

Chicago 2 841 962 -9 418 269

Los Angeles 3 877 139 -17 542 967

Moscow 10 381 288 -11 846 595

Saint Petersburg 4 039 751 -4 784 261

Peking 7 490 618 -11 244 673

Shanghai 12 762 953 -13 909 622

Ankara 3 519 177 -3 567 972

İstanbul 9 797 536 -11 588 545

Toronto 4 612 187 -6 040 829


the big 4 european cities are so close :eek2:

softee
May 20th, 2005, 09:43 AM
The Toronto figure should be 2.6 million for the city proper.

User
May 20th, 2005, 11:24 AM
How can a city within a state exceed states population?

http://img263.echo.cx/img263/3861/878ad.jpg

19 million population less than 2 years ago in the whoel state of new york,

i find hard to belive the new york city alone can have 22.3 million alone

User
May 20th, 2005, 11:26 AM
Also, LA has half of California's population???? hmmmm

here have a look at this, whole LA county has 10 million, not as stated above!

http://img285.echo.cx/img285/8999/872og.jpg

GM
May 20th, 2005, 11:40 AM
How can a city within a state exceed states population?

19 million population less than 2 years ago in the whoel state of new york,

i find hard to belive the new york city alone can have 22.3 million alone

It's because the metro area of New York City actually spreads over three states : New York, but Connecticut and New Jersey too.

User
May 20th, 2005, 11:48 AM
It's because the metro area of New York City actually spreads over three states : New York, but Connecticut and New Jersey too.
hmm wtf, never knew that... WTF i say !

http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/graphics/county.gif

i dont think it goes into Connecticut tho ...
http://www.aaronpeter.com/image/new_york_map.gif

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 12:53 PM
New York City metropolitan area occupied a large part of the Eastern New Jersey State.
the Newark Airport, the Giant Stadium...are both in New Jersey.
also a part of Connecticut is part of the NY Metropolitan area.

about LA, the metropolitan area is composed by 3 County, not only th LA County.
the Orange County and the San Bernardino Valley are part of the MA of LA.

In EUorpe something of similar happened in Italy, in Milano, where the city have only 1.4 Millions, but the MA have more than 7 Millions that are for an half part outside the Milano Province (similar to the USA County), and a small number in another Country, in the Canton Ticino, the souther part of Swiss.

a similar thing happened also with Basel, a city on the French, Swiss and German border and with the MA of Lille/Roubaix in French and Belgie

User
May 20th, 2005, 12:58 PM
^ i still dought L.A has half of the californian population, what about san francisco and san diego and las vagas, by the sounds of it seems like the whole total population of california all live in one of these 4 cities.

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 01:09 PM
For the Usa Census Boureau in the 2003 LA have 12,829,272 in the Metropolitan Area, and 17,262,730 in the Combined Metropolitan Area.
California have 35,484,453 (July 2003), so:
Los Angeles 17,262,730
San Francisco 7,154,350
San Diego 2,930,886
Sacramento 1,974,810

so more than 29.000.000 of Californian inhabitants live in the 4 biggest cities of the State. the other 6 Millions live in the small city or in the village.
nothing of unusual, cause California is a State with an high level of urbanisation. few people live in isolated areas.

New York
18,640,775 in the Metropolitan Area.
21,578,930 in the Combined Metropolitan Area.


btw...Vegas is in another State: Nevada.
and Nevada have 2,241,154 inhabitants that for MORE than an half part live in only one city: Las Vegas - 1,576,541.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 01:49 PM
The 18million metropolitan area around London is as described by London's governing body. At this stage it is the only official metropolitan area described by any U.K. governing body.

references here: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/strategies/sds/london_plan/lon_plan_all.pdf

here: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/strategies/sds/draft_london_plan/dlp_ch1.pdf

or here: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/strategies/sds/london_plan/lon_plan_1.pdf

It doesn't include all of the South East, but part of the South East & East. It covers quite a large area, but considerbly less than say the New York C.M.S.A.

The Paris figure is correct. It is the INSEE government definition of a metropolitan area, and is so far the only National metropolitan statistic in Europe that uses commuter percentages as one of the basis of the demographic. This is called "aire urbaine" in France (not to be confused with unité urbaine which is Urban Area)

If the same procedure was used for London, based on the commuter percentages of 10% (total population) into adjoining area (as compared to the U.S. method of 25% working population into adjoining county's) then it has been worked out that London's metro would be 17million.

Moscow's metro population is probably a lot larger than 11.8. There are loads of problems there counting all the masses of people that have migrated to the capital in the last few years - it is rumoured to be as high as 15million these days.

GM
May 20th, 2005, 01:56 PM
The Paris figure is correct. It is the INSEE government definition of a metropolitan area, and is so far the only National metropolitan statistic in Europe that uses commuter percentages as one of the basis of the demographic. This is called "aire urbaine" in France (not to be confused with unité urbaine which is Urban Area)

If the same procedure was used for London, based on the commuter percentages of 10% (total population) into adjoining area (as compared to the U.S. method of 25% working population into adjoining county's) then it has been worked out that London's metro would be 17million.


You must mean 40 %, don't you ?
Metropolitan area in France (aka aire urbaine) are based on commuter percentages of 40 %, and not 10 %.

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 02:05 PM
In EUorpe something of similar happened in Italy, in Milano, where the city have only 1.4 Millions, but the MA have more than 7 Millions that are for an half part outside the Milano Province (similar to the USA County), and a small number in another Country, in the Canton Ticino, the souther part of Swiss.

a similar thing happened also with Basel, a city on the French, Swiss and German border and with the MA of Lille/Roubaix in French and Belgie
- Also Zurich Metro includes German parts (Waldshut area)
- Geneva-Lausanne (Metro Leman) icludes big French parts, eg. Annemasse, Evian, Thonex.
- Copenhagen-Malmo is binational as well
- Tornio-Happaranda (SF/S) in a smaller scale
- Calais is included in London Economical Region
- Maastricht has German parts
- Bregenz-St.Margreten

GM
May 20th, 2005, 02:12 PM
- Calais is included in London Economical Region


Euh ?
English people who cross the Channel to buy cheaper wine and beer in France really make Calais part of the London Economical Region ?

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 02:16 PM
You must mean 40 %, don't you ?
Metropolitan area in France (aka aire urbaine) are based on commuter percentages of 40 %, and not 10 %.

You could be right, the INSEE documentation I read is all in French, and my French is... well, certainly no where near your brilliant English ;)

I just reread the INSEE definition, and it does indeed say 40% of resident population either commuting to the central core, or surrounding connected communities. (my best translation)

So, take what I said before about the INSEE adaption of London metropolitan model based on 40%.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 02:22 PM
Euh ?
English people who cross the Channel to buy cheaper wine and beer in France really make Calais part of the London Economical Region ?

It is certainly not part of London's metro, but there are very close connections to London now. Something like 10,000 people commute to London's metro from the Calais region daily, and it is expected to grow to 30,000 in the next decade or so.

I don't know what term to descibe this area's relationship to London, but "Economic Region" by Kuesel seems to fit.

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 02:26 PM
There is indeed a strong commuter scene in Calais and it is the "European Gate to the UK and London". But as you said it's not Metro, it's just economic and commuter area, as South Kent, Brighton etc. The same as Lugano for Milano I would say.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 02:34 PM
- Also Zurich Metro includes German parts (Waldshut area)
- Geneva-Lausanne (Metro Leman) icludes big French parts, eg. Annemasse, Evian, Thonex.
- Copenhagen-Malmo is binational as well
- Tornio-Happaranda (SF/S) in a smaller scale
- Calais is included in London Economical Region
- Maastricht has German parts
- Bregenz-St.Margreten

Yeap, these are called Euroregions, where a metro may cross a national border. When this happens
Within the Eurozone part of the EU, they operate often as fully standard metropolitan area’s, as not only are there no border control’s, but also with the same currency it is almost possible to not know what country you are in.

E.g. Bregenz in Austria with Lindau (Germany) in the metro (10 minutes away). There is no border (and no sign when traveling by commuter train between them) that you are crossing into another country, the same language, and the same currency.

Strasbourg (France) with Kehl (Germany) are another example, with only the river separating the two urban area’s. If it were not for the language difference, one would never know you are crossing into another country. And the language differences just make the metropolitan area that even more exotic and fascinating. One can shop in a French supermarket, and then walk across the river to shop in a German one, both with totally different foods, but the same currency.

Another interesting bi-polar metro is the Rhein-Maas. This combines Maastricht (Netherlands), Leige (Belgium) and Aachen (Germany) into a tri-nation, tri-city metro area. Three languages, no borders, single currency. Work in Germany, Live in Belgium, and smoke some pot in a cafe for lunch in Maastricht - fantastic!

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 02:37 PM
mmmhhh...Many Swiss people of Lugano come everyday to Milano for working, but there are also many people that come here to theatres, restaurants, nightlife...and there are more or less 15/20.000 retired people of Milano that living in Lugano or Ascona or other cities of Canton Ticino.
i think that is an half way between Economic Region and an effectiv MA.
is not only a commuter link!

coth
May 20th, 2005, 02:42 PM
City of Moscow.
City Limits: 10,5mln (+ ~800 thous of non registered)
Agglomeration: 13,8mln (+ ~2,5mln of non registered)

non registered is not poor, but illegal immigrants

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 03:17 PM
In the Regio Basiliensis there are many Germans now living in Alsace (Taxes) and work in Switzerland or Germany...

Sorry for forgetting Lindau with Bregenz!

Isn't the Ticino not also the place where the Milanesi go for shopping cheep gazoline? ;)

Locarno should be in Metro Zurich BTW. I was there two weeks ago - you hear only Züritüütsch :) Ascona is - from my experiences - in the hands of the rich Germans... St.Moritz is occupied by Milanesi and Russians... etc.

This shows that it's very difficult to define metros and economic areas only by spacial means. Time is as important as space - there are for example more people commuting (for work or for leisure) from Basel or Bern to Zurich (and much faster!) than from the areas inbetween. Laax or Locarno are more "Urban Zurich" than for example Suburbs like Bülach or Pfäffikon... :lol:

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 03:25 PM
^ year, some places like Switzerland, the Netherlands and Belgium are very difficult to define, as they have multiple cities very close to each other. The same as well with Northern England, and the built up urban area's of North/West Germany.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 03:27 PM
^^ these Euroregions always facinate me. Growing up in Sydney, the very concept that part of your city's metro can be in a different country, yet no more difficult to access than any other part of your metro is quite amazing. Especially the one's with quite different cultures, such as France/Germany.

Another one is Monaco (Monte Carlo) which can be considered part of Nice's metropolitan region.

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 03:36 PM
Isn't it officially in Nizza's?

Anyway in Switzerland we have the so-called Midland-corridor. From Geneva to St.Gallen is kind of a urban corridor planned in the 1940s based on the Randstad project in Holland - there should be one big 300km long city in the midlands and the parts left and right of it the green lung and agriculture land of the country. Unfortunalty it didn't work out quite as planned (also because of the concept of the "concentrated decentralization" project by the government) and now there is hardly any land available anymore (even 30 km away from Zurich center you have to pay up to 2000 SFr./m2 of land, 5mio people live on 15% of the country's area where only 30% is arable land!) and we have to import most of our food...

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 03:50 PM
I think that Montecarlo is IN the MA of Nice.
Nice city have 339,000, and the MA 888,784 that i think is wide from Menton on the Italian border to Cannes.


"you hear only Züritüütsch..."
my friend of Ascone and Locarno aren't happy of that!!!!
;)

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 03:56 PM
I am also not proud of it, believe me! But I think it's true that more than 30% of the Ticino pop is either Swiss Germans or Germans... not included all tourists and daytrippers (like me this time, sorry...) that flood the cities during the warm months.

No wonder anyway with this beauty and clime - these are some pics I took on Brisago (Ascona):
http://www.socio.ch/maro/images/DSC06394.jpg
http://www.socio.ch/maro/images/DSC06395.jpg
http://www.socio.ch/maro/images/DSC06399.jpg

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 04:05 PM
i know, i know...my family have a villa on the Lake Maggiore, at very few km from the Swiss border...

but is not everyday good weather!

http://img66.echo.cx/img66/6570/senzanome123xu.jpg (http://www.imageshack.us)

http://img66.echo.cx/img66/42/immagine0584wb.jpg (http://www.imageshack.us)

http://img66.echo.cx/img66/1129/immagine0712iw.jpg (http://www.imageshack.us)

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 04:08 PM
I think that Montecarlo is IN the MA of Nice.
Nice city have 339,000, and the MA 888,784 that i think is wide from Menton on the Italian border to Cannes.


Actually, the INSEE Aire urbaine (metropolitan area) of Nice was 933,080 in 1999. It could have reached the 1million mark since then. But I have no idea if the INSEE would consider Monaco as officially part of the metro considering it's in a different country (though without any borders of cause)

It would be interesting to know if the INSEE Aire urbaine crosses national borders.

User
May 20th, 2005, 04:10 PM
For the Usa Census Boureau in the 2003 LA have 12,829,272 in the Metropolitan Area, and 17,262,730 in the Combined Metropolitan Area.
California have 35,484,453 (July 2003), so:
Los Angeles 17,262,730
San Francisco 7,154,350
San Diego 2,930,886
Sacramento 1,974,810

so more than 29.000.000 of Californian inhabitants live in the 4 biggest cities of the State. the other 6 Millions live in the small city or in the village.
nothing of unusual, cause California is a State with an high level of urbanisation. few people live in isolated areas.

New York
18,640,775 in the Metropolitan Area.
21,578,930 in the Combined Metropolitan Area.


btw...Vegas is in another State: Nevada.
and Nevada have 2,241,154 inhabitants that for MORE than an half part live in only one city: Las Vegas - 1,576,541.

oh shit true, i always had it in my head that las vegas was in cali..dunno why, wow nevada only 2 mil ppl... nevada is like west o, 2 mil ppl and 1.5 live in perth :D, also cant belive cali is so urban ..

GM
May 20th, 2005, 04:13 PM
Actually, the INSEE Aire urbaine (metropolitan area) of Nice was 933,080 in 1999. It could have reached the 1million mark since then. But I have no idea if the INSEE would consider Monaco as officially part of the metro considering it's in a different country (though without any borders of cause)

It would be interesting to know if the INSEE Aire urbaine crosses national borders.

I don't think. BTW Monaco has only 32 000 inhabitants so it wouldn't count much in the metro area of Nice.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 04:13 PM
Here is the main metropolitan regions (I think) in France from the INSEE.

Now, please let me know if I'm wrong here, as my French is not that good. But from what I can understand the area's in Black are Urban Area's, and in Red Metropolitan.

here is the list of locations in PDF (http://www.insee.fr/fr/ffc/docs_ffc/ip765l.pdf)
http://www.insee.fr/fr/ffc/docs_ffc/ip765c.jpg

GM
May 20th, 2005, 04:17 PM
Here is the main metropolitan regions (I think) in France from the INSEE.

Now, please let me know if I'm wrong here, as my French is not that good. But from what I can understand the area's in Black are Urban Area's, and in Red Metropolitan.


You are right. The black areas seem to be indeed the urban areas, and the black+red areas correspond to the metroplitan areas.

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 04:32 PM
^thanks Nantes. Well, it certainly looks as though the metropolitan area's don't cross national borders in their calculations.

gruber
May 20th, 2005, 04:34 PM
In that map Monaco is part of Nice MA.
or...it is so tiny that is not painted on!

Justme
May 20th, 2005, 04:44 PM
^ here Monaco could be included, above the map, I included the pdf which had all the cities, and there was a reference to Monaco, but I couldn't be sure if it's included. It certainly should be.

What I can see though is that Kehl and surrounding area, isn't included in Strasbourg's metro, which is really wrong since all that divides the two urban area's is the river. No borders, no customs, same currency.

rocky
May 20th, 2005, 06:46 PM
im french and i dont understand those numberS. this map is quite complex

Küsel
May 20th, 2005, 09:57 PM
the aires urbaines in France include mostly huge areas of countryside regions as well, like the US. Look for example at Bordeaux: it includes half of the biggest forest in Europe :) I think it's a very good concept the French have because they really differ between agglomerations per se (in black) and aires urbaines which include the rural periferia - very much after Thünen's and Christaller's concepts :)

neilio
May 20th, 2005, 10:20 PM
']pop. figures for 2005

london city 7 421 228 metro 11 327 857

Paris 2 110 694 metro 11 501 738

Madrid 3 102 644 - 6 163 198

Barcelona 1 570 378 - 4 973 001

Tōkyō 8 336 611 -31 480 498

New York 8 108 040 -22 313 756

Chicago 2 841 962 -9 418 269

Los Angeles 3 877 139 -17 542 967

Moscow 10 381 288 -11 846 595

Saint Petersburg 4 039 751 -4 784 261

Peking 7 490 618 -11 244 673

Shanghai 12 762 953 -13 909 622

Ankara 3 519 177 -3 567 972

İstanbul 9 797 536 -11 588 545

Toronto 4 612 187 -6 040 829

i think the Toronto population figure is......Waaaayyy off, especially for the city proper

I'mBack
May 20th, 2005, 11:07 PM
What I can see though is that Kehl and surrounding area, isn't included in Strasbourg's metro, which is really wrong since all that divides the two urban area's is the river. No borders, no customs, same currency.

Maybe it's just "not shown" as this map takes in consideration only the French territory; in fact each "urban area" is delimited by a green line, and those areas on the borders are clearly not "closed" completely by the green line; therefore I may suspect the "urban area" goes well over the border
(Btw, I think Lille is one of the most clear example of "transborder" metro area in Europe, as it extends well over the French border into the Belgium territory)

cello1974
May 21st, 2005, 01:01 AM
go to emporis.com and look up the cities
And see, how they're wrong? São Paulo has 11.2 million and more than 19 million in metro. In Turkey, they use the numbers of the vilayetler (provinces) as city figures and the metro areas are, dunno, where they got that data from! Shanghai city has 13.4 million, but the metro, dunno.... :bash:

cello1974
May 21st, 2005, 01:04 AM
They are quite correct numbers.

London metro is about 12, 18 is the economic area and 22 is South East England. Moscow I think included now also most of its suburbs outside the ring motorway that was once its border and has 13mio within the city proper (but I am also not sure).

Shanghai: it is a municipality of 6000 km2 and has some 13mio in it, but not all in the urban area which is between 9 and 12.

Quite well defined since the 40s I think is Sao Paulo: city proper (about 1600 km2): 10.2mio, metro (Grande Sao Paulo, ca 8000 km2 - Santos and Campinas NOT included): 18.5 mio.
São Paulo 11.2 million city proper (1,554 km²), metro 19.1 million (7,965 km²), CME Complexo Metropolitano Expandido 32.2 million (42,000 km²) :cheers:

Küsel
May 21st, 2005, 11:27 AM
Wow, I had the figueres in my head, they were quite close then as it seems :)
But DID Sampa surpass the 11mio already?

the spliff fairy
May 21st, 2005, 03:50 PM
London: 7.1 million 14 million in metro.
Paris: 2.2 million 11.1 million in metro.
Istanbul: 10 million 12.6 million in metro.(+poor people not registered)
NYC: 8.1 million 21.8 million in metro(i´m not sure if it´s that much).(+poor people not registered)
Tokyo: 12 million 33.7 million in metro.
Moscow: 10.3 million 11.8 million in metro.(+poor people not registered) I have read somewhere the there is 29 million people in moscow´s metro area but i´m not certain.
Shanghai: 9.1 million 13(or 16) million in metro.(+poor people not registered)
This is the information i got on the internet, i just want to know if this information is correct.

Ok this is my take on it - I don't count CMSA btw as they arent contiguous or even connected sometimes, covering anything up to 21,000 sq km in American cases and larger for Chinese (half of Western Europe could count as one single CMSA otherwise)

1. London 7.4 million city, 12 million metro
2. Paris 10.5 city, 11.5 metro
3. Istanbul 10 million 13 metro
4. NYc 8.1 million, 17 million metro
5. Tokyo 12 million, 28 million metro
6. Moscow 10.3 million, over 12 million metro
7. Shanghai 16 million city, 23 million metro (as of 2003-and growing by 1 -3 million per year) - of officially registered city permit holders that count would be reduced to 13million in the city and 16 million in metro.
Transients and new residents were not counted before but since 2003 the count has allowed the entry of voluntary registering illegal migrants that have been in the city for over 3 months, hence the dramatic rise showing the truer figure that year.

coth
May 21st, 2005, 05:23 PM
^have you read my post?

cello1974
May 22nd, 2005, 12:59 AM
Wow, I had the figueres in my head, they were quite close then as it seems :)
But DID Sampa surpass the 11mio already?
Yes, it has. No very much over 11 million, but it passed 11 million.

Latin l0cO
May 22nd, 2005, 01:31 AM
^ i still dought L.A has half of the californian population, what about san francisco and san diego and las vagas, by the sounds of it seems like the whole total population of california all live in one of these 4 cities.
HAHA Las Vegas isn't even in cali. You obviously aren't use to the term "metro population".

SHiRO
May 23rd, 2005, 02:36 AM
That map is brilliant justme! Got more? :cheers:

EarlyBird
May 23rd, 2005, 02:51 AM
1. London 7.4 million city, 12 million metro

The London Urban Area had a population of 8,278,251 in 2001 according to the Office of National Statistics. Much more reliable than a randomly drawn political boundary.

Quezalcoatl26
May 23rd, 2005, 03:38 AM
London's 18mn metro is an official govt. figure.

Wow you people live in a box of sardine, horrible sh!t. You can kill as much as about 1/3 of british and about 40% english people by nuking london area. Interesting for people like Kim. Man you people need to plan your cities better.

Justme
May 23rd, 2005, 07:21 AM
Wow you people live in a box of sardine, horrible sh!t. You can kill as much as about 1/3 of british and about 40% english people by nuking london area. Interesting for people like Kim. Man you people need to plan your cities better.

This 18million is quite spread out, and not the "city" of London, but it's metropolitan area. (city, plus surrounding satellite towns & cities)

The direct urban area has around 8.2million using the U.K. standard, and when using the U.S. standard of measuring Urban Area's, it has about 12million.

The 8.2million figure ends at a green belt that surrounds London, this area is not very wide, but is considered a wonderful break to the urban sprawl and is mainly farmland area. After this short green belt, countless other towns and cities spread out from London and this forms the rest of the population area that the 18million metropolitan region is. Because of the density of these surrounding satellite towns and cities, there is still loads of countryside for people to enjoy, but also excellent commuter transport to get people into the city (or other parts of the metro).

Justme
May 23rd, 2005, 07:22 AM
That map is brilliant justme! Got more? :cheers:

Sorry, no. That one was from the official INSEE website. I agree it's pretty good. Wish the French were in charge of defining metropolitan area's of the EU and had maps like that (and their statistics) for the whole block. :cheers:

spxy
May 23rd, 2005, 10:30 AM
For those who dont believe the London figures heres a map.The area within the black is greater London, which has the offical population of
7-8,000,000ish population the metro area includes the towns around, that are linked to London .This map does not include east and south.
http://pokedesign.0catch.com/images/ks_urban_south_east_part_8.jpg

SHiRO
May 23rd, 2005, 05:13 PM
Sorry, no. That one was from the official INSEE website. I agree it's pretty good. Wish the French were in charge of defining metropolitan area's of the EU and had maps like that (and their statistics) for the whole block. :cheers:
Indeed, at least they also take into account cross border metros.