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  • URBANIZATION

    Urbanization (or urbanisation in British English) is the population shift from rural to urban areas, the corresponding decrease in the proportion of people living in rural areas, and the ways in which societies adapt to this change. It can also mean population growth in urban areas instead of rural ones.[1] It is predominantly the process by which towns and cities are formed and become larger as more people begin living and working in central areas.[2]

    Although the two concepts are sometimes used interchangeably, urbanization should be distinguished from urban growth. Urbanization refers to the proportion of the total national population living in areas classified as urban, whereas urban growth strictly refers to the absolute number of people living in those areas.[3] It is predicted that by 2050 about 64% of the developing world and 86% of the developed world will be urbanized. This is predicted to generate artificial scarcities of land, lack of drinking water, playgrounds and so on for most urban dwellers.[4] The predicted urban population growth is equivalent to approximately 3 billion urbanites by 2050, much of which will occur in Africa and Asia.[5] Notably, the United Nations has also recently projected that nearly all global population growth from 2017 to 2030 will be by cities, with about 1.1 billion new urbanites over the next 10 years.[6] In the long term, urbanization is expected to significantly impact the quality of life in negative ways.[7][8]

    Urbanization is relevant to a range of disciplines, including urban planninggeographysociologyarchitectureeconomicseducationstatistics, and public health. The phenomenon has been closely linked to globalizationmodernizationindustrializationmarketizationadministrative/institutional power, and the sociological process of rationalization.[9][10][11] Urbanization can be seen as a specific condition at a set time (e.g. the proportion of total population or area in cities or towns), or as an increase in that condition over time. Therefore, urbanization can be quantified either in terms of the level of urban development relative to the overall population, or as the rate at which the urban proportion of the population is increasing. Urbanization creates enormous social, economic and environmental challenges, which provide an opportunity for sustainability with the “potential to use resources much less or more efficiently, to create more sustainable land use and to protect the biodiversity of natural ecosystems.” However, current urbanization trends have shown that massive urbanization has led to unsustainable ways of living.[5] Developing urban resilience and urban sustainability in the face of increased urbanization is at the centre of international policy in Sustainable Development Goal 11 “Sustainable cities and communities.”

    Urbanization is not merely a modern phenomenon, but a rapid and historic transformation of human social roots on a global scale, whereby predominantly rural culture is being rapidly replaced by predominantly urban culture. The first major change in settlement patterns was the accumulation of hunter-gatherers into villages many thousands of years ago. Village culture is characterized by common bloodlines, intimate relationships, and communal behaviour, whereas urban culture is characterized by distant bloodlines, unfamiliar relations, and competitive behaviour. This unprecedented movement of people is forecast to continue and intensify during the next few decades, mushrooming cities to sizes unthinkable only a century ago. As a result, the world urban population growth curve has up till recently followed a quadratic-hyperbolic pattern.[12]

    History

    [edit]

    Urbanization over the past 500 years[13]
    A global map illustrating the first onset and spread of urban centres around the world, based on.[14]

    From the development of the earliest cities in Indus valley civilizationMesopotamia and Egypt until the 18th century, an equilibrium existed between the vast majority of the population who were engaged in subsistence agriculture in a rural context, and small centres of populations in the towns where economic activity consisted primarily of trade at markets and manufactures on a small scale. Due to the primitive and relatively stagnant state of agriculture throughout this period, the ratio of rural to urban population remained at a fixed equilibrium. However, a significant increase in the percentage of the global urban population can be traced in the 1st millennium BCE.[15]

    With the onset of the British Agricultural Revolution and Industrial Revolution[16] in the late 18th century, this relationship was finally broken and an unprecedented growth in urban population took place over the course of the 19th century, both through continued migration from the countryside and due to the tremendous demographic expansion that occurred at that time. In England and Wales, the proportion of the population living in cities with more than 20,000 people jumped from 17% in 1801 to 54% in 1891. Moreover, and adopting a broader definition of urbanization, while the urbanized population in England and Wales represented 72% of the total in 1891, for other countries the figure was 37% in France, 41% in Prussia and 28% in the United States.[17]

    As labourers were freed up from working the land due to higher agricultural productivity they converged on the new industrial cities like Manchester and Birmingham which were experiencing a boom in commerce, trade, and industry. Growing trade around the world also allowed cereals to be imported from North America and refrigerated meat from Australasia and South America. Spatially, cities also expanded due to the development of public transport systems, which facilitated commutes of longer distances to the city centre for the working class.

    Urbanization rapidly spread across the Western world and, since the 1950s, it has begun to take hold in the developing world as well. At the turn of the 20th century, just 15% of the world population lived in cities.[18] According to the UN, the year 2007 witnessed the turning point when more than 50% of the world population were living in cities, for the first time in human history.[17]

    Yale University in June 2016 published urbanization data from the time period 3700 BC to 2000 AD, the data was used to make a video showing the development of cities on the world during the time period.[19][20][21] The origins and spread of urban centres around the world were also mapped by archaeologists.[14]

    Causes

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    This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
    Population age comparison between rural Pocahontas County, Iowa and urban Johnson County, Iowa, illustrating the flight of young adults (red) to urban centres in Iowa.[22]
    The City of ChicagoIllinois is an example of the early American grid system of development. The grid is enforced even on uneven topography.

    Urbanization occurs either organically or planned as a result of individual, collective and state action. Living in a city can be culturally and economically beneficial since it can provide greater opportunities for access to the labour market, better education, housing, and safety conditions, and reduce the time and expense of commuting and transportation. Conditions like density, proximity, diversity, and marketplace competition are elements of an urban environment that deemed beneficial. However, there are also harmful social phenomena that arise: alienation, stress, increased cost of living, and mass marginalization that are connected to an urban way of living.[citation needed] Suburbanization, which is happening in the cities of the largest developing countries, may be regarded as an attempt to balance these harmful aspects of urban life while still allowing access to the large extent of shared resources.[citation needed]

    In cities, money, services, wealth and opportunities are centralized. Many rural inhabitants come to the city to seek their fortune and alter their social position. Businesses, which provide jobs and exchange capital, are more concentrated in urban areas. Whether the source is trade or tourism, it is also through the ports or banking systems, commonly located in cities, that foreign money flows into a country.

    Many people move into cities for economic opportunities, but this does not fully explain the very high recent urbanization rates in places like China and India. Rural flight is a contributing factor to urbanization. In rural areas, often on small family farms or collective farms in villages, it has historically been difficult to access manufactured goods, though the relative overall quality of life is very subjective, and may certainly surpass that of the city. Farm living has always been susceptible to unpredictable environmental conditions, and in times of droughtflood or pestilence, survival may become extremely problematic.

    Thai farmers are seen as poor, stupid, and unhealthy. As young people flee the farms, the values and knowledge of rice farming and the countryside are fading, including the tradition of long kek, helping neighbours plant, harvest, or build a house. We are losing what we call Thai-ness, the values of being kind, helping each other, having mercy and gratefulness.

    – Iam Thongdee, Professor of Humanities, Mahidol University in Bangkok[23]

    In a New York Times article concerning the acute migration away from farming in Thailand, life as a farmer was described as “hot and exhausting”. “Everyone says the farmer works the hardest but gets the least amount of money”. In an effort to counter this impression, the Agriculture Department of Thailand is seeking to promote the impression that farming is “honorable and secure”.[23]

    However, in Thailand, urbanization has also resulted in massive increases in problems such as obesity. Shifting from a rural environment to an urbanized community also caused a transition to a diet that was mainly carbohydrate-based to a diet higher in fat and sugar, consequently causing a rise in obesity.[24] City life, especially in modern urban slums of the developing world, is certainly hardly immune to pestilence or climatic disturbances such as floods, yet continues to strongly attract migrants. Examples of this were the 2011 Thailand floods and 2007 Jakarta flood. Urban areas are also far more prone to violencedrugs, and other urban social problems. In the United States, industrialization of agriculture has negatively affected the economy of small and middle-sized farms and strongly reduced the size of the rural labour market.

    These are the costs of participating in the urban economy. Your increased income is canceled out by increased expenditure. In the end, you have even less left for food.

    – Madhura Swaminathan, economist at Kolkata’s Indian Statistical Institute[25]

    Particularly in the developing world, conflict over land rights due to the effects of globalization has led to less politically powerful groups, such as farmers, losing or forfeiting their land, resulting in obligatory migration into cities. In China, where land acquisition measures are forceful, there has been far more extensive and rapid urbanization (54%) than in India (36%), where peasants form militant groups (e.g. Naxalites) to oppose such efforts. Obligatory and unplanned migration often results in the rapid growth of slums. This is also similar to areas of violent conflict, where people are driven off their land due to violence.

    Cities offer a larger variety of services, including specialist services not found in rural areas. These services require workers, resulting in more numerous and varied job opportunities. Elderly people may be forced to move to cities where there are doctors and hospitals that can cater to their health needs. Varied and high-quality educational opportunities are another factor in urban migration, as well as the opportunity to join, develop, and seek out social communities.

    Urbanization also creates opportunities for women that are not available in rural areas. This creates a gender-related transformation where women are engaged in paid employment and have access to education. This may cause fertility to decline. However, women are sometimes still at a disadvantage due to their unequal position in the labour market, their inability to secure assets independently from male relatives and exposure to violence.[26]

    People in cities are more productive than in rural areas. An important question is whether this is due to agglomeration effects or whether cities simply attract those who are more productive. Urban geographers have shown that there exists a large productivity gain due to locating in dense agglomerations.[27] It is thus possible that agents locate in cities in order to benefit from these agglomeration effects.[28]

    Dominant conurbation

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    See also: List of largest cities throughout history and Primate city

    The dominant conurbation(s) of a country can get more benefits from the same things cities offer, attracting the rural population and urban and suburban populations from other cities. Dominant conurbations are quite often disproportionately large cities, but do not have to be. For instance Greater Manila is a conurbation instead of a city. Its total population of 20 million (over 20% national population) make it a primate city, but Quezon City (2.7 million), the largest municipality in Greater Manila, and Manila (1.6 million), the capital, are normal cities instead. A conurbation’s dominance can be measured by output, wealth, and especially population, each expressed as a percentage of the entire country’s. Greater Seoul is one conurbation that dominates South Korea. It is home to 50% of the entire national population.[29]

    Though Greater Busan-Ulsan (15%, 8 million) and Greater Osaka (14%, 18 million) dominate their respective countries, their populations are moving to their even more dominant rivals, Seoul and Tokyo respectively.[30]

    Economic effects

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    A crowded BTS Station during the rush hour in BangkokThailand
    Gross domestic product per capita and level of urbanization

    As cities develop, costs will skyrocket. This often takes the working class out of the market, including officials and employees of the local districts. For example, Eric Hobsbawm‘s book The age of revolution: 1789–1848 (published 1962 and 2005) chapter 11, stated “Urban development in our period was a gigantic process of class segregation, which pushed the new labouring poor into great morasses of misery outside the centres of government, business, and the newly specialized residential areas of the bourgeoisie. The almost universal European division into a ‘good’ west end and a ‘poor’ east end of large cities developed in this period.” This is probably caused by the south-west wind which carries coal smoke and other pollutants down, making the western edges of towns better than the eastern ones.[31]

    Similar problems now affect less developed countries, as rapid development of cities makes inequality worse. The drive to grow quickly and be efficient can lead to less fair urban development. Think tanks such as the Overseas Development Institute have proposed policies that encourage labour-intensive to make use of the migration of less skilled workers.[32] One problem these migrant workers are involved with is the growth of slums. In many cases, the rural-urban unskilled migrant workers are attracted by economic opportunities in cities. Unfortunately, they cannot find a job and or pay for houses in urban areas and have to live in slums.[33]

    Urban problems, along with developments in their facilities, are also fuelling suburb development trends in less developed nations, though the trend for core cities in said nations tends to continue to become ever denser. Development of cities is often viewed negatively, but there are positives in cutting down on transport costs, creating new job opportunities, providing education and housing, and transportation. Living in cities permits individuals and families to make use of their closeness to workplaces and diversity.[34][35][36][37] While cities have more varied markets and goods than rural areas, facility congestion, domination of one group, high overhead and rental costs, and the inconvenience of trips across them frequently combine to make marketplace competition harsher in cities than in rural areas.[citation needed]

    In many developing countries where economies are growing, the growth is often random and based on a small number of industries. Youths in these nations lack access to financial services and business advisory services, cannot get credit to start a business, and have no entrepreneurial skills. Therefore, they cannot seize opportunities in these industries. Making sure adolescents have access to excellent schools and infrastructure to work in such industries and improve schools is compulsory to promote a fair society.[38]

    Environmental effects

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    Furthermore, urbanization improves environmental eminence through superior facilities and standards in urban areas as compared to rural areas. Lastly, urbanization curbs pollution emissions by increasing innovations.[39] In his 2009 book Whole Earth Discipline, Stewart Brand argues that the effects of urbanization are primarily positive for the environment. First, the birth rate of new urban dwellers falls immediately to replacement rate and keeps falling, reducing environmental stresses caused by population growth.[40] Secondly, emigration from rural areas reduces destructive subsistence farming techniques, such as improperly implemented slash and burn agriculture. Alex Steffen also speaks of the environmental benefits of increasing the urbanization level in “Carbon Zero: Imagining Cities that can save the planet”.[41]

    However, existing infrastructure and city planning practices are not sustainable.[42] In July 2013 a report issued by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs[43] warned that with 2.4 billion more people by 2050, the amount of food produced will have to increase by 70%, straining food resources, especially in countries already facing food insecurity due to changing environmental conditions. The mix of changing environmental conditions and the growing population of urban regions, according to UN experts, will strain basic sanitation systems and health care, and potentially cause a humanitarian and environmental disaster.[44]

    Urban heat island

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    Urban heat islands have become a growing concern over the years. An urban heat island is formed when industrial areas absorb and retain heat. Much of the solar energy reaching rural areas is used to evaporate water from plants and soil. In cities, there are less vegetation and exposed soil. Most of the sun’s energy is instead absorbed by buildings and asphalt; leading to higher surface temperatures. Vehicles, factories, and heating and cooling units in factories and homes release even more heat.[45] As a result, cities are often 1 to 3 °C (1.8 to 5.4 °F) warmer than other areas near them.[46] Urban heat islands also make the soil drier and absorb less carbon dioxide from emissions.[47] A Qatar University study found that land-surface temperatures in Doha increased annually by 0.65 °C from 2002 to 2013 and 2023.[48]

    Water quality

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    Urban runoff, polluted water created by rainfall on impervious surfaces, is a common effect of urbanization. Precipitation from rooftops, roads, parking lots and sidewalks flows to storm drains, instead of percolating into groundwater. The contaminated stormwater in the drains is typically untreated and flows to nearby streams, rivers or coastal bays.[49]

    Eutrophication in water bodies is another effect large populations in cities have on the environment. When rain occurs in these large cities, it filters CO2 and other pollutants in the air onto the ground. These chemicals are washed directly into rivers, streams, and oceans, making water worse and damaging ecosystems in them.[50]

    Eutrophication is a process which causes low levels of oxygen in water and algal blooms that may harm aquatic life.[51] Harmful algal blooms make dangerous toxins. They live best in nitrogen- and phosphorus-rich places which include the oceans contaminated by the aforementioned chemicals.[52] In these ideal conditions, they choke surface water, blocking sunlight and nutrients from other life forms. Overgrowth of algal blooms makes water worse overall and disrupts the natural balance of aquatic ecosystems. Furthermore, as algal blooms die, CO2 is produced. This makes the ocean more acidic, a process called acidification.[53]

    The ocean’s surface can absorb CO2 from the Earth’s atmosphere as emissions increase with the rise in urban development. In fact, the ocean absorbs a quarter of the CO2 produced by humans.[54] This helps to lessen the harmful effects of greenhouse gases. But it also makes the ocean more acidic.[55] A drop in pH the prevents the proper formation of calcium carbonate, which sea creatures need to build or keep shells or skeletons.[56][54] This is especially true for many species of molluscs and coral. However, some species have been able to thrive in a more acidic environment.[57]

    Food waste

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    Rapid growth of communities creates new challenges in the developed world and one such challenge is an increase in food waste[58] also known as urban food waste.[59][60][61] Food waste is the disposal of food products that can no longer be used due to unused products, expiration, or spoilage. The increase of food waste can raise environmental concerns such as increase production of methane gases and attraction of disease vectors.[60][62] Landfills are the third leading cause of the release of methane,[63] causing a concern on its impact to our ozone and on the health of individuals. Accumulation of food waste causes increased fermentation, which increases the risk of rodent and bug migration. An increase in migration of disease vectors creates greater potential of disease spreading to humans.[64]

    Waste management systems vary on all scales from global to local and can also be influenced by lifestyle. Waste management was not a primary concern until after the Industrial Revolution. As urban areas continued to grow along with the human population, proper management of solid waste became an apparent concern. To address these concerns, local governments sought solutions with the lowest economic impacts which meant implementing technical solutions at the very last stage of the process.[65] Current waste management reflects these economically motivated solutions, such as incineration or unregulated landfills. Yet, a growing increase for addressing other areas of life cycle consumption has occurred from initial stage reduction to heat recovery and recycling of materials.[65] For example, concerns for mass consumption and fast fashion have moved to the forefront of the urban consumers’ priorities. Aside from environmental concerns (e.g. climate change effects), other urban concerns for waste management are public health and land access.

    Habitat fragmentation

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    Urbanization can have a large effect on biodiversity by causing a division of habitats and thereby alienation of species, a process known as habitat fragmentation.[66] Habitat fragmentation does not destroy the habitat, as seen in habitat loss, but rather breaks it apart with things like roads and railways[67] This change may affect a species ability to sustain life by separating it from the environment in which it is able to easily access food, and find areas that they may hide from predation[68] With proper planning and management, fragmentation can be avoided by adding corridors that aid in the connection of areas and allow for easier movement around urbanized regions.[69][70]

    Depending on the various factors, such as level of urbanization, both increases or decreases in “species richness” can be seen.[71][72] This means that urbanization may be detrimental to one species but also help facilitate the growth of others. In instances of housing and building development, many times vegetation is completely removed immediately in order to make it easier and less expensive for construction to occur, thereby obliterating any native species in that area. Habitat fragmentation can filter species with limited dispersal capacity. For example, aquatic insects are found to have lower species richness in urban landscapes.[73] The more urbanized the surrounding of habitat is, the fewer species can reach the habitat.[74] Other times, such as with birds, urbanization may allow for an increase in richness when organisms are able to adapt to the new environment. This can be seen in species that may find food while scavenging developed areas or vegetation that has been added after urbanization has occurred i.e. planted trees in city areas[75]

    Health and social effects

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    When cities don’t plan for increases in population it drives up house and land prices, creating rich (ghettos) and poor ghettos. “You get a very unequal society and that inequality is manifested where people live, in our neighbourhoods, and it means there can be less capacity for empathy and less development for all society.”

    – Jack Finegan, Urban Programme Specialist at UN-Habitat[76]

    In the developing world, urbanization does not translate into a significant increase in life expectancy.[77] Rapid urbanization has led to increased mortality from non-communicable diseases associated with lifestyle, including cancer and heart disease.[78] Differences in mortality from contagious diseases vary depending on the particular disease and location.[77]

    Urban health levels are on average better in comparison to rural areas. However, residents in poor urban areas such as slums and informal settlements suffer “disproportionately from disease, injury, premature death, and the combination of ill-health and poverty entrenches disadvantage over time.”[26] Many of the urban poor have difficulty accessing health services due to their inability to pay for them; so they resort to less qualified and unregulated providers.[citation needed]

    While urbanization is associated with improvements in public hygienesanitation and access to health care, it also entails changes in occupational, dietary, and exercise patterns.[78] It can have mixed effects on health patterns, alleviating some problems, and accentuating others.[77]

    Nutrition

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    Traditionally, rural populations have tended to eat plant-based diets rich in grains, fruits and vegetables, and with low fat content. However, rural people migrating to urban areas often shift towards diets that rely more on processed foods characterized by a higher content of meat, sugars, refined grains and fats. Urban residents typically have reduced time available for at-home food preparation combined with increased disposable income, facilitating access to convenience foods and ready-to-eat meals.[79]

    One such effect is the formation of food deserts. Nearly 23.5 million people in the United States lack access to supermarkets within one mile of their home.[80] Several studies suggest that long distances to a grocery store are associated with higher rates of obesity and other health disparities.[81]

    Food deserts in developed countries often correspond to areas with a high density of fast food chains and convenience stores that offer little to no fresh food.[82] Urbanization has been shown to be associated with the consumption of less fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains and a higher consumption of processed foods and sugar-sweetened beverages.[81] Poor access to healthy food and high intakes of fat, sugar and salt are associated with a greater risk for obesity, diabetes and related chronic disease. Overall, body mass index and cholesterol levels increase sharply with national income and the degree of urbanization.[40]

    Food deserts in the United States are most commonly found in low-income and predominately African American neighbourhoods.[81] One study on food deserts in Denver, Colorado found that, in addition to minorities, the affected neighbourhoods also had a high proportion of children and new births.[83] In children, urbanization is associated with a lower risk of under-nutrition but a higher risk of being overweight.[77]

    Infections

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    Urbanization has also been linked to the spread of communicable diseases, which can spread more rapidly in the favourable environment with more people living in a smaller area. Such diseases can be respiratory infections and gastrointestinal infections. Other infections could be infections, which need a vector to spread to humans. An example of this could be dengue fever.[84]

    Asthma

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    Urbanization has also been associated with an increased risk of asthma as well. Throughout the world, as communities transition from rural to more urban societies, the number of people affected by asthma increases. The odds of reduced rates of hospitalization and death from asthmas has decreased for children and young adults in urbanized municipalities in Brazil. This finding indicates that urbanization may have a negative impact on population health particularly affecting people’s susceptibility to asthma.[85]

    In low and middle income countries many factors contribute to the high numbers of people with asthma. Similar to areas in the United States with increasing urbanization, people living in growing cities in low income countries experience high exposure to air pollution, which increases the prevalence and severity of asthma among these populations.[86] Links have been found between exposure to traffic-related air pollution and allergic diseases.[87] Children living in poor, urban areas in the United States now have an increased risk of morbidity due to asthma in comparison to other low-income children in the United States.[88] In addition, children with croup living in urban areas have higher hazard ratios for asthma than similar children living in rural areas. Researchers suggest that this difference in hazard ratios is due to the higher levels of air pollution and exposure to environmental allergens found in urban areas.[89]

    Exposure to elevated levels of ambient air pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO), and particulate matter with a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres (PM2.5), can cause DNA methylation of CpG sites in immune cells, which increases children’s risk of developing asthma. Studies have shown a positive correlation between Foxp3 methylation and children’s exposure to NO2, CO, and PM2.5. Furthermore, any amount of exposure to high levels of air pollution have shown long term effects on the Foxp3 region.[90]

    Despite the increase in access to health services that usually accompanies urbanization, the rise in population density negatively affects air quality ultimately mitigating the positive value of health resources as more children and young adults develop asthma due to high pollution rates.[85] However, urban planning, as well as emission control, can lessen the effects of traffic-related air pollution on allergic diseases such as asthma.[87]

    Crime

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    Historically, crime and urbanization have gone hand in hand. The simplest explanation is that areas with a higher population density are surrounded by greater availability of goods. Committing crimes in urbanized areas is also more feasible. Modernization has led to more crime as well, as the modern media has raised greater awareness of the income gap between the rich and the poor. This leads to feelings of deprivation, which in turn can lead to crime. In some regions where urbanization happens in wealthier areas, a rise in property crime and a decrease in violent crime is seen.[91]

    Data shows that there is an increase in crime in urbanized areas. Some factors include per capita income, income inequality, and overall population size. There is also a smaller association between unemployment rate, police expenditures and crime.[92] The presence of crime also has the ability to produce more crime. These areas have less social cohesion and therefore less social control. This is evident in the geographical regions that crime occurs in. As most crime tends to cluster in city centres, the further the distance from the centre of the city, the lower the occurrence of crimes are.[93]

    Migration is also a factor that can increase crime in urbanized areas. People from one area are displaced and forced to move into an urbanized society. Here they are in a new environment with new norms and social values. This can lead to less social cohesion and more crime.[94]

    Physical activity

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    Although urbanization tends to produce more negative effects, one positive effect that urbanization has impacted is an increase in physical activity in comparison to rural areas. Residents of rural areas and communities in the United States have higher rates of obesity and engage in less physical activity than urban residents.[95] Rural residents consume a higher percent of fat calories and are less likely to meet the guidelines for physical activity and more likely to be physically inactive.[96][97] In comparison to regions within the United States, the west has the lowest prevalence of physical inactivity and the south has the highest prevalence of physical inactivity.[97] Metropolitan and large urban areas across all regions have the highest prevalence of physical activity among residents.[97]

    Barriers such as geographic isolation, busy and unsafe roads, and social stigmas lead to decreased physical activity in rural environments.[98] Faster speed limits on rural roads prohibits the ability to have bike lanes, sidewalks, footpaths, and shoulders along the side of the roads.[95] Less developed open spaces in rural areas, like parks and trails, suggest that there is lower walkability in these areas in comparison to urban areas.[95] Many residents in rural settings have to travel long distances to utilize exercise facilities, taking up too much time in the day and deterring residents from using recreational facilities to obtain physical activity.[98] Additionally, residents of rural communities are traveling further for work, decreasing the amount of time that can be spent on leisure physical activity and significantly decreases the opportunity to partake in active transportation to work.[95]

    Neighbourhoods and communities with nearby fitness venues, a common feature of urbanization, have residents that partake in increased amounts of physical activity.[98] Communities with sidewalks, street lights, and traffic signals have residents participating in more physical activity than communities without those features.[95] Having a variety of destinations close to where people live, increases the use of active transportation, such as walking and biking.[99] Active transportation is also enhanced in urban communities where there is easy access to public transportation due to residents walking or biking to transportation stops.[99]

    In a study comparing different regions in the United States, opinions across all areas were shared that environmental characteristics like access to sidewalks, safe roads, recreational facilities, and enjoyable scenery are positively associated with participation in leisure physical activity.[97] Perceiving that resources are nearby for physical activity increases the likelihood that residents of all communities will meet the guidelines and recommendations for appropriate physical activity.[99] Specific to rural residents, the safety of outdoor developed spaces and convenient availability to recreational facilities matters most when making decisions on increasing physical activity.[96] In order to combat the levels of inactivity in rural residents, more convenient recreational features, such as the ones discussed in this paragraph, need to be implemented into rural communities and societies.[citation needed]

    Mental health

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    Urbanization factors that contribute to mental health can be thought of as factors that affect the individual and factors that affect the larger social group. At the macro, social group level, changes related to urbanization are thought to contribute to social disintegration and disorganization. These macro factors contribute to social disparities which affect individuals by creating perceived insecurity.[100] Perceived insecurity can be due problems with the physical environment, such as issues with personal safety, or problems with the social environment, such as a loss of positive self-concepts from negative events.[101] Increased stress is a common individual psychological stressor that accompanies urbanization and is thought to be due to perceived insecurity. Changes in social organization, a consequence of urbanization, are thought to lead to reduced social support, increased violence, and overcrowding. It is these factors that are thought to contribute to increased stress.[102]

    A 2004 study of 4.4 million Swedish residents found that people who live in cities have a 20% increased chance of developing depression[need quotation to verify].[103]

    Changing forms

    [edit]

    This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
    Patterns of urbanization

    Different forms of urbanization can be classified depending on the style of architecture and planning methods as well as the historic growth of areas.

    Map showing urban areas with at least one million inhabitants in 2020.

    In cities of the developed world urbanization traditionally exhibited a concentration of human activities and settlements around the downtown area, the so-called in-migration. In-migration refers to migration from former colonies and similar places. The fact that many immigrants settle in impoverished city centres led to the notion of the “peripheralization of the core”, which simply describes that people who used to be at the periphery of the former empires now live right in the centre.

    Recent developments, such as inner-city redevelopment schemes, mean that new arrivals in cities no longer necessarily settle in the centre. In some developed regions, the reverse effect, originally called counter urbanization has occurred, with cities losing population to rural areas, and is particularly common for richer families. This has been possible because of improved communications and has been caused by factors such as the fear of crime and poor urban environments. It has contributed to the phenomenon of shrinking cities experienced by some parts of the industrialized world.

    Rural migrants are attracted by the possibilities that cities can offer, but often settle in shanty towns and experience extreme poverty. The inability of countries to provide adequate housing for these rural migrants is related to overurbanization, a phenomenon in which the rate of urbanization grows more rapidly than the rate of economic development, leading to high unemployment and high demand for resources.[104] In the 1980s, this was attempted to be tackled with the urban bias theory which was promoted by Michael Lipton.

    Most of the urban poor in developing countries unable to find work can spend their lives in insecure, poorly paid jobs. According to research by the Overseas Development Institute pro-poor urbanization will require labour-intensive growth, supported by labour protection, flexible land use regulation and investments in basic services.’[105]

    Suburbanization

    [edit]

    Main article: Suburbanization

    When the residential area shifts outward, this is called suburbanization. A number of researchers and writers suggest that suburbanization has gone so far to form new points of concentration outside the downtown both in developed and developing countries such as India.[106] This networked, poly-centric form of concentration is considered by some emerging pattern of urbanization. It is called variously edge city (Garreau, 1991), network city (Batten, 1995), postmodern city (Dear, 2000), or exurb, though the latter term now refers to a less dense area beyond the suburbs. Los Angeles is the best-known example of this type of urbanization. In the United States, this process has reversed as of 2011, with “re-urbanization” occurring as suburban flight due to chronically high transport costs.[107]

    …the most important class conflict in the poor countries of the world today is not between labour and capital. Nor is it between foreign and national interests. It is between rural classes and urban classes. The rural sector contains most of the poverty and most of the low-cost sources of potential advance; but the urban sector contains most of the articulateness, organization, and power. So the urban classes have been able to win most of the rounds of the struggle with the countryside…

    – Michael Lipton, author of urban bias theory[108]

    Planned urbanization

    [edit]

    Urbanization can be planned urbanization or organic. Planned urbanization, i.e.: planned community or the garden city movement, is based on an advance plan, which can be prepared for military, aesthetic, economic or urban design reasons. Examples can be seen in many ancient cities; although with exploration came the collision of nations, which meant that many invaded cities took on the desired planned characteristics of their occupiers. Many ancient organic cities experienced redevelopment for military and economic purposes, new roads carved through the cities, and new parcels of land were cordoned off serving various planned purposes giving cities distinctive geometric designs. UN agencies prefer to see urban infrastructure installed before urbanization occurs. Landscape planners are responsible for landscape infrastructure (public parkssustainable urban drainage systemsgreenways etc.) which can be planned before urbanization takes place, or afterwards to revitalize an area and create greater livability within a region. Concepts of control of the urban expansion are considered in the American Institute of Planners.

    As population continues to grow and urbanize at unprecedented rates, new urbanism and smart growth techniques are implemented to create a transition into developing environmentally, economically, and socially sustainable cities. Additionally, a more well-rounded approach articulates the importance to promote participation of non-state actors, which could include businesses, research and non-profit organizations and, most importantly, local citizens.[109] Smart Growth and New Urbanism’s principles include walkability, mixed-use development, comfortable high-density design, land conservation, social equity, and economic diversity. Mixed-use communities work to fight gentrification with affordable housing to promote social equity, decrease automobile dependency to lower use of fossil fuels, and promote a localized economy. Walkable communities have a 38% higher average GDP per capita than less walkable urban metros (Leinberger, Lynch). By combining economic, environmental, and social sustainability, cities will become equitable, resilient, and more appealing than urban sprawl that overuses land, promotes automobile use, and segregates the population economically.[110][111]

    Water scarcity

    [edit]

    This section is an excerpt from Water stress and urbanization.[edit]

    Water stress is increasingly affecting urbanization. Water stress arises through slum development, anarchic construction, water scarcity, the absence of financial structures, the absence of basic structures, the absence of infrastructure such as roads, bridges, sidewalks, signs, markets, schools, etc., can sometimes hinder the productivity of certain cities. Unfortunately, this phenomenon affects even the largest cities in the world; in 2018, 300,000 were recorded in the world, housing around 40% of the world’s urban population.[112]

    Urbanization throughout the world

    [edit]

    Main article: Urbanization by sovereign state

    Map with circled African and Asian belts of non-urbanized countries

    Presently, most countries in the world are urbanized, with the global urbanization average numbering 56.2% in 2020.[113] However, there are great differences between some regions; the nations of Europe, the Middle East, the Americas and East Asia are predominantly urbanized. Meanwhile, two large belts (from central to eastern Africa, and from central to southeast Asia) of very lowly urbanized countries exist, as seen on the map here. These labeled countries are among the least urbanized.[citation needed]

    As of 2022, urbanization rates are over 80% in the United StatesCanadaMexicoBrazilArgentinaChileJapanAustralia, the United KingdomFranceFinlandDenmarkIsraelSpain and South KoreaSouth America is the most urbanized continent in the world, accounting for more than 80% of its total population living in urban areas. It is also the only continent where the

  • URBAN AREA

    An urban area[a] is a human settlement with a high population density and an infrastructure of built environment. This is the core of a metropolitan statistical area in the United States, if it contains a population of more than 50,000.[2]

    Urban areas originate through urbanization, and researchers categorize them as cities, towns, conurbations or suburbs. In urbanism, the term “urban area” contrasts to rural areas such as villages and hamlets; in urban sociology or urban anthropology, it often contrasts with natural environment.

    The development of earlier predecessors of modern urban areas during the urban revolution of the 4th millennium BCE[3] led to the formation of human civilization and ultimately to modern urban planning, which along with other human activities such as exploitation of natural resources has led to a human impact on the environment.

    Recent historical growth

    [edit]

    Earth’s land use in 2019, built-up area being estimated as 1.5 million square kilometers.

    In 1950, 764 million people or about 30 percent of the world’s 2.5 billion people lived in urban areas. By 2014, it was 3.9 billion or about 53 percent of the world’s 7.3 billion people that lived in urban areas. The change was driven by a combination of increased total population and increased percent of population living in urban areas.[4] In 2009, the number of people living in urban areas (3.42 billion) surpassed the number living in rural areas (3.41 billion), and since then the world has become more urban than rural.[5] This was the first time that the majority of the world’s population lived in a city.[6] By that time a high estimate calculated up to 3.5 million square kilometers of land were urban, estimates ranging from 1% of global land area.[7][8] In 2014 there were 7.3 billion people living on the planet,[9] of which the global urban population comprised 3.9 billion. The Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs at that time predicted the urban population would occupy 68% of the world population by 2050, with 90% of that growth coming from Africa and Asia.[10]

    Urbanization

    [edit]

    Main article: Urbanization

    Urban land area (km2), 2010[11]
    Urban areas with at least one million inhabitants in 2020

    Urban areas are created and further developed by the process of urbanization. They are measured for various purposes, including analyzing population density and urban sprawl. Urban areas are generally found in the United StatesCanadaBrazilMexicoArgentinaChileJapanAustralia, and many other countries where the urbanization rate is high.

    Unlike an urban area, a metropolitan area includes not only the urban area, but also satellite cities plus intervening rural land that is socio-economically connected to the urban core city, typically by employment ties through commuting, with the urban core city being the primary labor market.

    The concept of an “urban area” as used in economic statistics should not be confused with the concept of the “urban area” used in road safety statistics. This term was first created by Geographer Brian Manning. The last concept is also known as “built-up area in road safety“. According to the definition by the Office for National Statistics, “Built-up areas are defined as land which is ‘irreversibly urban in character’, meaning that they are characteristic of a town or city. They include areas of built-up land with a minimum of 20 hectares (200,000 m2; 49 acres). Any areas [separated by] less than 200 metres [of non-urban space] are linked to become a single built-up area.[12]

    Argentina and Japan are countries where the urbanization rate is over 90% while Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Mexico, and the United States are countries where the urbanization rate is between 80% and 90%, although within the U.S. state of New Jersey, the urbanization rate is 100%.[13]

    Largest urban areas

    [edit]

    There are two measures of the degree of urbanization of a population. The first, urban population, describes the percentage of the total population living in urban areas, as defined by the country. The second measure, rate of urbanization, describes the projected average rate of change of the size of the urban population over the given period of time. According to Urbanization by sovereign state article, the world as a whole is 56.2% urbanized, with roughly one-quarter of the countries reported as greater than 80% urbanized. Data is taken from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency World Factbook estimates from 2020.[14]

    See also: List of largest citiesList of largest urban areas by country, and List of largest urban areas by continent

    According to Demographia, these are the 200 largest urban areas in the world by population (as of 2023):[15]

    Urban AreaCountry/ RegionPopulation
    1TokyoYokohamaJapan37,785,000
    2JakartaIndonesia35,386,000
    3DelhiIndia31,190,000
    4GuangzhouFoshanChina27,119,000
    5MumbaiIndia25,189,000
    6ManilaPhilippines24,156,000
    7ShanghaiChina24,042,000
    8SeoulIncheonSouth Korea23,225,000
    9CairoEgypt22,679,000
    10Mexico CityMexico21,905,000
    11KolkataIndia21,747,000
    12São PauloBrazil21,486,000
    13New YorkUnited States21,396,000
    14KarachiPakistan20,249,000
    15DhakaBangladesh19,134,000
    16BangkokThailand18,884,000
    17BeijingChina18,883,000
    18MoscowRussia17,878,000
    19ShenzhenChina17,778,000
    20Buenos AiresArgentina15,748,000
    21Los AngelesUnited States15,587,000
    22JohannesburgPretoriaSouth Africa15,551,000
    23BangaloreIndia15,257,000
    24ChengduChina15,016,000
    25Ho Chi Minh CityVietnam14,953,000
    26OsakaKobeKyotoJapan14,916,000
    27LagosNigeria14,540,000
    28IstanbulTurkey14,441,000
    29LahorePakistan13,504,000
    30KinshasaDemocratic Republic of the Congo13,493,000
    31TehranIran13,382,000
    32ChongqingChina12,653,000
    33Rio de JaneiroBrazil12,306,000
    34Xi’anChina12,211,000
    35ChennaiIndia12,053,697
    36ParisFrance11,108,000
    37ZhengzhouChina11,068,000
    38LuandaAngola10,914,000
    39LondonUnited Kingdom10,803,000
    40DongguanChina10,753,000
    41LimaPeru10,556,000
    42WuhanChina10,353,000
    43BogotaColombia10,252,000
    44TianjinChina10,047,000
    45HyderabadIndia9,797,000
    46TaipeiTaiwan9,662,000
    47HangzhouChina9,618,000
    48NagoyaJapan9,439,000
    49Kuala LumpurMalaysia9,387,000
    50ChicagoUnited States8,954,000
    51NanjingChina8,507,000
    52RiyadhSaudi Arabia8,309,000
    53ShenyangFushunChina8,044,000
    54AhmadabadIndia8,006,000
    55Dar es SalaamTanzania7,965,000
    56WashingtonBaltimoreUnited States7,853,000
    57BostonProvidenceUnited States7,429,000
    58OnitshaNigeria7,205,000
    59BandungIndonesia7,203,000
    60Addis AbabaEthiopia7,185,000
    61KhartoumSudan7,155,000
    62SantiagoChile7,099,000
    63DallasFort WorthUnited States6,979,000
    64NairobiKenya6,929,000
    65San FranciscoSan JoseUnited States6,844,000
    66TorontoCanada6,837,000
    67PuneIndia6,819,000
    68MadridSpain6,798,000
    69EssenDüsseldorfGermany6,769,000
    70QuanzhouChina6,743,000
    71HoustonUnited States6,703,000
    72BaghdadIraq6,624,000
    73SuratIndia6,601,000
    74AmmanJordan6,563,000
    75SurabayaIndonesia6,556,000
    76Hong KongHong Kong SAR6,468,000
    77YangonMyanmar6,426,000
    78HanoiVietnam6,359,000
    79QingdaoChina6,291,000
    80MiamiUnited States6,139,000
    81SuzhouChina6,091,000
    82SingaporeSingapore5,926,000
    83PhiladelphiaUnited States5,795,000
    84AccraGhana5,785,000
    85St. PetersburgRussia5,750,000
    86AtlantaUnited States5,702,000
    87AbidjanIvory Coast5,678,000
    88KabulAfghanistan5,566,000
    89AlexandriaEgypt5,552,000
    90MilanItaly5,471,000
    91JiddahSaudi Arabia5,408,000
    92AnkaraTurkey5,359,000
    93FaisalabadPakistan5,356,000
    94BarcelonaSpain5,317,000
    95XiamenChina5,253,000
    96Belo HorizonteBrazil5,242,000
    97TaiyuanChina5,067,000
    98ChangshaChina5,065,000
    99HefeiChina5,052,000
    100MashhadIran5,045,000
    101KunmingChina4,995,000
    102RawalpindiIslamabadPakistan4,954,000
    103DubaiUnited Arab Emirates4,945,000
    104SydneyAustralia4,836,000
    105KumasiGhana4,794,000
    106MelbourneAustralia4,709,000
    107KampalaUganda4,679,000
    108MonterreyMexico4,674,000
    109KanoNigeria4,670,000
    110LucknowIndia4,661,000
    111YaoundeCameroon4,642,000
    112PhoenixUnited States4,617,000
    113Cape TownSouth Africa4,595,000
    114ÜrümqiChina4,548,000
    115WuxiChina4,524,000
    116CasablancaMorocco4,499,000
    117FuzhouChina4,487,000
    118GuadalajaraMexico4,401,000
    119İzmirTurkey4,367,251
    120JaipurIndia4,360,000
    121KanpurIndia4,350,000
    122Santo DomingoDominican Republic4,345,000
    123BerlinGermany4,286,000
    124GuiyangChina4,269,000
    125DetroitUnited States4,258,000
    126NanchangChina4,240,000
    127MogadishuSomalia4,219,000
    128ChangzhouChina4,206,000
    129ChittagongBangladesh4,204,000
    130DalianChina4,177,000
    131ZhongshanChina4,113,000
    132KuwaitKuwait4,066,000
    133JinanChina4,057,000
    134MedanIndonesia4,027,000
    135WenzhouChina4,024,000
    136SeattleUnited States4,001,000
    137TashkentUzbekistan3,935,000
    138ShijiazhuangChina3,871,000
    139HarbinChina3,869,000
    140RecifeBrazil3,866,000
    141BusanSouth Korea3,843,000
    142BamakoMali3,783,000
    143IndoreIndia3,765,000
    144DoualaCameroon3,751,000
    145MontrealCanada3,750,000
    146IbadanNigeria3,657,000
    147NaplesItaly3,653,000
    148SanaYemen3,585,000
    149ColomboSri Lanka3,532,000
    150DakarSenegal3,510,000
    151Porto AlegreBrazil3,504,000
    152Mbuji-MayiDemocratic Republic of the Congo3,493,000
    153NagpurIndia3,493,000
    154AlgiersAlgeria3,462,000
    155DurbanSouth Africa3,452,000
    156Port HarcourtNigeria3,429,000
    157FortalezaBrazil3,415,000
    158BrasiliaBrazil3,406,000
    159ChangchunChina3,387,000
    160SalvadorBrazil3,344,000
    161PatnaIndia3,331,000
    162AthensGreece3,309,000
    163NanningChina3,249,000
    164KathmanduNepal3,247,000
    165MedellinColombia3,242,000
    166RomeItaly3,239,000
    167VaranasiIndia3,229,000
    168GujranwalaPakistan3,218,000
    169TampaSt. PetersburgUnited States3,203,000
    170LusakaZambia3,202,000
    171GuayaquilEcuador3,183,000
    172OuagadougouBurkina Faso3,181,000
    173DamascusSyria3,155,000
    174San DiegoUnited States3,078,000
    175OrlandoUnited States3,075,000
    176KozhikodeIndia3,049,000
    177BrisbaneGold CoastAustralia3,039,000
    178RotterdamHagueNetherlands3,027,000
    179Tel AvivIsrael3,006,000
    180BakuAzerbaijan3,002,000
    181KyivUkraine3,001,000
    182Ad-DammamSaudi Arabia2,994,000
    183LanzhouChina2,977,000
    184CharlotteUnited States2,879,000
    185CuritibaBrazil2,873,000
    186ClevelandUnited States2,871,000
    187BrazzavilleRepublic of the Congo2,860,000
    188AleppoSyria2,859,000
    189ThiruvananthapuramIndia2,851,000
    190LisbonPortugal2,832,000
    191MinneapolisSt. PaulUnited States2,796,000
    192CampinasBrazil2,789,000
    193HyderabadPakistan2,789,000
    194MultanPakistan2,783,000
    195ConakryGuinea2,781,000
    196QuitoEcuador2,778,000
    197ZhangjiaggangChina2,770,000
    198Guatemala CityGuatemala2,765,000
    199LubumbashiDemocratic Republic of the Congo2,750,000
    200AgraIndia2,737,000

    Definitions

    [edit]

    Presently, urban data are based on arbitrary definitions that vary from country to country and from year or census to the next, making them difficult to compare. An Urban Metric System (UMS) has been conceived that could correct the problem,[16] since it allows computing the urban area limits and central points, and it can be applied in the same way to all past, present and future population and job distributions. It is based on vector field calculations obtained by assuming that, in a given space, all inhabitants and jobs exert the same attractive force A and repulsive force R. The net force (A – R) exerted by each inhabitant or job is given by [1/(1 + d)] – [1/( β + d/2)], where d = distance and β is the only parameter. UMS distinguishes the following types of urban areas, each type corresponding to a given value of β:

    Urban areaDistance at which the attractive force = the repulsive forceValue of β
    1Central city10 km6
    2Agglomeration20 km11
    3Metropolis40 km21
    4Patropolis80 km41
    5Megalopolis160 km81
    6Urban system320 km161
    7Urban macrosystem640 km321
    8Continental system1,280 km641
    9Intercontinental system2,560 km1,281
    10World system5,120 km2,561

    UMS has been applied to some Canadian cases since 2018, but the data presented in this article are still based on the various existing national definitions, which are disparate.

    The UN publishes data on cities, urban areas and rural areas, but relies almost entirely on national definitions of these areas. The UN principles and recommendations state that due to different characteristics of urban and rural areas across the globe, a global definition is not possible.[17]

    European countries[which?] define urbanized areas on the basis of urban-type land use, not allowing any gaps of typically more than 200 metres (220 yd), and use satellite imagery instead of census blocks to determine the boundaries of the urban area. In less-developed countries[which?], in addition to land use and density requirements, a requirement that a large majority of the population, typically 75%, is not engaged in agriculture and/or fishing is sometimes used.[citation needed]

    By region

    [edit]

    East Asia

    [edit]

    China

    [edit]

    Main article: List of cities in China by population and built-up area

    Since 2000, China‘s cities have expanded at an average rate of 10% annually. It is estimated that China’s urban population will increase by 292 million people by 2050,[4] when its cities will house a combined population of over one billion.[18] The country’s urbanization rate increased from 17.4% to 46.6% between 1978 and 2009.[19] Between 150 and 200 million migrant workers work part-time in the major cities, returning home to the countryside periodically with their earnings.[20][21]

    China has more cities with one million or more long-term residents than any other country, including the three global cities of Beijing, Hong Kong, and Shanghai; by 2025, the country will be home to 221 cities with over a million inhabitants.[18] The figures in the table below are from the 2008 census, and are only estimates of the urban populations within administrative city limits; a different ranking exists when considering the total municipal populations (which includes suburban and rural populations). The large “floating populations” of migrant workers make conducting censuses in urban areas difficult;[22] the figures below include only long-term residents.

    Panoramic view of Pudong‘s skyline from the Bund in Shanghai

    vteLargest cities or municipalities in China
    China Urban Construction Statistical Yearbook 2020 Urban Population and Urban Temporary Population [23][note 1][note 2]
    RankNameProvincePop.RankNameProvincePop.

    Shanghai

    Beijing
    1ShanghaiSH24,281,40011Hong KongHK7,448,900
    Guangzhou

    Shenzhen
    2BeijingBJ19,164,00012ZhengzhouHA7,179,400
    3GuangzhouGD13,858,70013NanjingJS6,823,500
    4ShenzhenGD13,438,80014Xi’anSN6,642,100
    5TianjinTJ11,744,40015JinanSD6,409,600
    6ChongqingCQ11,488,00016ShenyangLN5,900,000
    7DongguanGD9,752,50017QingdaoSD5,501,400
    8ChengduSC8,875,60018HarbinHL5,054,500
    9WuhanHB8,652,90019HefeiAH4,750,100
    10HangzhouZJ8,109,00020ChangchunJL4,730,900
    1. ^ Population of Hong Kong as of 2018 estimate[24]
    2. ^ The data of Chongqing in the list is the data of “Metropolitan Developed Economic Area”, which contains two parts: “City Proper” and “Metropolitan Area”. The “City proper” are consist of 9 districts: YuzhongDadukouJiangbeiShapingbaJiulongpoNan’anBeibeiYubei, & Banan, has the urban population of 5,646,300 as of 2018. And the “Metropolitan Area” are consist of 12 districts: FulingChangshouJiangjinHechuanYongchuanNanchuanQijiangDazuBishanTongliangTongnan, & Rongchang, has the urban population of 5,841,700.[25] Total urban population of all 26 districts of Chongqing are up to 15,076,600.

    Japan

    [edit]

    In Japan, urbanized areas are defined as contiguous areas of densely inhabited districts (DIDs) using census enumeration districts as units with a density requirement of 4,000 inhabitants per square kilometre (10,000/sq mi).

    South Korea

    [edit]

    Seoul is the largest urban area in South Korea.

    Taiwan

    [edit]

    Greater Taipei is the largest urban area in Taiwan.

    vteLargest cities or towns in Taiwan
    source
    RankNameAdministrative divisionPop.RankNameAdministrative divisionPop.

    New Taipei

    Taichung
    1New TaipeiNew Taipei4,004,36711Zhubei CityHsinchu County210,754
    Kaohsiung

    Taipei
    2TaichungTaichung2,819,79812Pingtung CityPingtung County194,096
    3KaohsiungKaohsiung2,731,63513Yuanlin CityChanghua County122,518
    4TaipeiTaipei2,488,04314Douliu CityYunlin County107,928
    5Taoyuan CityTaoyuan City2,286,94215ToufenMiaoli County105,513
    6TainanTainan1,855,09216Taitung CityTaitung County103,323
    7Hsinchu CityHsinchu452,92817Hualien CityHualien County99,579
    8KeelungKeelung361,89118Nantou CityNantou County97,403
    9Chiayi CityChiayi263,18819CaotunNantou County96,778
    10Changhua CityChanghua County226,74420ZhudongHsinchu County96,464

    South Asia

    [edit]

    India

    [edit]

    Main articles: Urbanisation in India and List of cities in India by population

    For the Census of India 2011, the definition of urban area is a place having a minimum population of 5,000 of density 400 persons per square kilometre (1,000/sq mi) or higher, and 75% plus of the male working population employed in non-agricultural activities. Places administered by a municipal corporation, cantonment board or notified town area committee are automatically considered urban areas.[26]

    The Census of India 2011 also defined the term “urban agglomeration” as an integrated urban area consisting of a core town together with its “outgrowths” (contiguous suburbs).[27]

    Largest urban agglomerations in India by populationvte(2011 census)[28][29]
    RankCity nameState/territoryPopulationRankCity nameState/territoryPopulation
    1MumbaiMaharashtra18,394,91228LudhianaPunjab1,618,879
    2DelhiDelhi16,349,83129NashikMaharashtra1,562,769
    3KolkataWest Bengal14,112,53630VijayawadaAndhra Pradesh1,491,202
    4ChennaiTamil Nadu8,696,01031MaduraiTamil Nadu1,465,625
    5BengaluruKarnataka8,520,43532VaranasiUttar Pradesh1,435,113
    6HyderabadTelangana7,749,33433MeerutUttar Pradesh1,424,908
    7AhmedabadGujarat6,361,08434FaridabadHaryana1,414,050
    8PuneMaharashtra5,057,70935RajkotGujarat1,390,933
    9SuratGujarat4,591,24636JamshedpurJharkhand1,339,438
    10JaipurRajasthan3,073,35037SrinagarJammu and Kashmir1,273,312
    11KanpurUttar Pradesh2,920,49638JabalpurMadhya Pradesh1,268,848
    12LucknowUttar Pradesh2,902,92039AsansolWest Bengal1,243,414
    13NagpurMaharashtra2,497,87040Vasai-VirarMaharashtra1,222,390
    14GhaziabadUttar Pradesh2,375,82041PrayagrajUttar Pradesh1,216,719
    15IndoreMadhya Pradesh2,170,29542DhanbadJharkhand1,196,214
    16CoimbatoreTamil Nadu2,151,46643AurangabadMaharashtra1,193,167
    17KochiKerala2,119,72444AmritsarPunjab1,183,705
    18PatnaBihar2,049,15645JodhpurRajasthan1,138,300
    19KozhikodeKerala2,030,51946RanchiJharkhand1,126,741
    20BhopalMadhya Pradesh1,886,10047RaipurChhattisgarh1,123,558
    21ThrissurKerala1,861,26948KollamKerala1,110,668
    22VadodaraGujarat1,822,22149GwaliorMadhya Pradesh1,102,884
    23AgraUttar Pradesh1,760,28550BhilaiChhattisgarh1,064,222
    24VisakhapatnamAndhra Pradesh1,730,32051ChandigarhChandigarh1,026,459
    25MalappuramKerala1,699,06052TiruchirappalliTamil Nadu1,022,518
    26ThiruvananthapuramKerala1,687,40653KotaRajasthan1,001,694
    27KannurKerala1,642,89254MysoreKarnataka990,900

    Pakistan

    [edit]

    Main articles: Urbanisation in Pakistan and List of most populous cities in Pakistan

    In Pakistan, an area is a major city and municipality if it has more than 100,000 inhabitants according to census results. Cities include adjacent cantonments. Urbanisation in Pakistan has increased since the time of independence and has several different causes. The majority of southern Pakistan’s population lives along the Indus River. Karachi is its most populous city.[30] In the northern half of the country, most of the population lives in an arc formed by the cities of LahoreFaisalabadRawalpindiIslamabadGujranwalaSialkotGujratJhelumSargodhaSheikhupuraNowsheraMardan and Peshawar. During 1990–2008, city dwellers made up 36% of Pakistan’s population, making it the most urbanised nation in South Asia. Furthermore, 50% of Pakistanis live in towns of 5,000 people or more.[31] Karachi is the most populated city in Pakistan closely followed by Lahore according to the 2017 Census.

    Bangladesh

    [edit]

    In Bangladesh, there are total 532 urban areas, which are divided into three categories. Those are City CorporationMunicipal Corporation (Pourasova) and Upazila town. Among those urban areas, Dhaka is the largest city by population and area, with a population of 19.10 million.[32] In Bangladesh, there are total 11 City Corporations and 329 Municipal Corporations and 203 Small towns, which serves as the center for Upazilas. According to 2011 population census, Bangladesh has an urban population of 28%, with a growth rate of 2.8%.[33] At this growth rate, it is estimated that the urban population of Bangladesh will reach 79 million or 42% of total population by 2035.

    Southeast Asia

    [edit]

    Philippines

    [edit]

    In 2020, 54 percent of the Philippine population lived in urban areas.[34] With an estimated population of 16.3 million, Metro Manila is the most populous metropolitan area in the Philippines and the 11th in the world. However, the greater urban area is the 5th largest in the world with a population of 20,654,307 people (2010 estimate).[35]

    Singapore

    [edit]

    Further information: Geography of Singapore and Planning Areas of Singapore

    As an island city-state, about 5.6 million people live and work within 700 square kilometres (270 sq mi). With 64 islands and isletsSingapore Island makes up the largest urban area in the country. According to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, the country has the highest urbanised population in Southeast Asia, with 100 percent of its population living in an urban area.[36] The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) is responsible for the urban land-use planning, which designates land use and urban density of the country.[37] The country is divided into 5 regions for planning purposes by the URA, even though as a city state Singapore is defined as a single continuous urban area. It is further subdivided into 55 urban planning areas, which acts as the boundaries of planned towns within the country.[38]

    Vietnam

    [edit]

    In Vietnam, there are six types of urban areas:

    Thailand

    [edit]

    Bangkok is the largest urban area in Thailand.

    Europe

    [edit]

    Finland

    [edit]

    Main articles: Urban areas in Finland and List of urban areas in Finland by population

    A street sign in Vimpeli indicating the beginning of an urban area in Finland

    As in other Nordic countries, an urban area (taajama in Finnish) in Finland must have a building at least every 200 m (660 ft) and at least 200 people. To be considered a town or a city (kaupunki) for statistical purposes, an urban area must have at least 15,000 people. This is not to be confused with the city / town designation used by municipalities.[39][40]

    France

    [edit]

    Main article: Functional area (France)

    In France, an urban area (Fr: aire d’attraction d’une ville) is a zone encompassing an area of built-up growth (called an “urban unit” (unité urbaine)[41] – close in definition to the North American urban area) and its commuter belt (couronne). Americans would find the INSEE definition of the urban area[42] to be similar to their metropolitan area.

    The largest cities in France, in terms of urban area population (2017), are Paris (12,628,266), Lyon (2,323,221), Marseille (1,760,653), Toulouse (1,360,829), Bordeaux (1,247,977), Lille (1,191,117), Nice (1,006,201), Nantes (972,828), Strasbourg (790,087) and Rennes (733,320).[43]

    Panorama of Paris as seen from the Eiffel Tower as full 360-degree view (river flowing from north-east to south-west, right to left)

    Germany

    [edit]

    Germany has a number of large cities. The largest conurbation is the Rhine-Ruhr region (11 million in 2008), including Düsseldorf (the capital of North Rhine-Westphalia), CologneBonnDortmundEssenDuisburg, and Bochum.[44]

    vteLargest urban agglomerations in Germany
    Federal Statistical Office of Germany (31 December 2022)
    RankNameStatePop.RankNameStatePop.

    Rhine-Ruhr

    Berlin
    1Rhine-RuhrNorth Rhine-Westphalia11,199,07311ChemnitzSaxony867,051
    Rhine-Main

    Stuttgart
    2BerlinBerlin4,661,92512HanoverLower Saxony807,181
    3Rhine-MainHesse3,200,20113DresdenSaxony799,317
    4StuttgartBaden-Württemberg3,044,42814SaarSaarland762,791
    5MunichBavaria2,415,96415BremenBremen668,074
    6HamburgHamburg2,399,25016AachenNorth Rhine-Westphalia663,371
    7Rhine-NeckarBaden-Württemberg1,426,05617KarlsruheBaden-Württemberg612,031
    8NurembergBavaria1,247,30918AugsburgBavaria554,118
    9LeipzigSaxony1,068,42919Freiburg im BreisgauBaden-Württemberg339,767
    10BielefeldNorth Rhine-Westphalia941,93320KasselHesse335,358

    Netherlands

    [edit]

    The Netherlands is the 30th-most densely populated country in the world, with 404.6 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,048/sq mi)—or 497 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,287/sq mi) if only the land area is counted. The Randstad is the country’s largest conurbation located in the west of the country and contains the four largest cities: Amsterdam, RotterdamThe Hague, and Utrecht. The Randstad has a population of 7 million inhabitants and is the 6th largest metropolitan area in Europe.

    Norway

    [edit]

    Main article: List of urban areas in Norway by population

    Norway defines urban areas (“tettsteder”) similarly to the other Nordic countries. Unlike in Denmark and Sweden, the distance between each building has to be of less than 50 m, although exceptions are made due to parks, industrial areas, rivers, and similar. Groups of houses less than 400 m from the main body of an urban area are included in the urban area.[45]

    Poland

    [edit]

    In Poland, official “urban” population figures simply refer to those localities which have the status of towns (miasta). The “rural” population is that of all areas outside the boundaries of these towns. This distinction may give a misleading impression in some cases, since some localities with only village status may have acquired larger and denser populations than many many smaller towns[46] with most excessive example of Poznań, most spread urban area of the country with population of the city app. 534 thousand and metropolitan area around 1 million inhabitants. On the other hand, the Katowice urban area with numerous large and medium cities covers 1,468 km and has above 2 million people. The metropolitan areas in Poland are the biggest urban zones (e.g. Katowice metropolitan areaŁódź metropolitan area and Szczecin metropolitan area) and have great impact on the rural surroundings, as it is around LublinRadomKielceTarnów and Białystok.

    Russia

    [edit]

    Moscow, the capital and largest city of Russia

    Moscow, the capital and largest city of Russia, has a population estimated at 12.4 million residents within the city limits,[47] while over 17 million residents in the urban area,[48] and over 20 million residents in the Moscow Metropolitan Area.[49] It is among the world’s largest cities, being the most populous city entirely within Europe, the most populous urban area in Europe,[48] the most populous metropolitan area in Europe,[49] and also the largest city by land area on the European continent.[50] Saint Petersburg, the cultural capital, is the second-largest city, with a population of roughly 5.4 million inhabitants.[51] Other major urban areas are YekaterinburgNovosibirskKazanNizhny Novgorod, and Chelyabinsk.

    vteLargest cities or towns in Russia
    2024 estimate[52]
    RankNameFederal subjectPop.RankNameFederal subjectPop.

    Moscow

    Saint Petersburg
    1MoscowMoscow13,149,80311Rostov-on-DonRostov Oblast1,140,487
    Novosibirsk

    Yekaterinburg
    2Saint PetersburgSaint Petersburg5,597,76312KrasnodarKrasnodar Krai1,138,654
    3NovosibirskNovosibirsk Oblast1,633,85113OmskOmsk Oblast1,104,485
    4YekaterinburgSverdlovsk Oblast1,536,18314VoronezhVoronezh Oblast1,046,425
    5KazanTatarstan1,318,60415PermPerm Krai1,026,908
    6KrasnoyarskKrasnoyarsk Krai1,205,47316VolgogradVolgograd Oblast1,018,898
    7Nizhny NovgorodNizhny Novgorod Oblast1,204,98517SaratovSaratov Oblast887,365
    8ChelyabinskChelyabinsk Oblast1,177,05818TyumenTyumen Oblast861,098
    9UfaBashkortostan1,163,30419TolyattiSamara Oblast667,956
    10SamaraSamara Oblast1,158,95220MakhachkalaDagestan622,091

    Spain

    [edit]

    Spain is a very highly urbanized country. Madrid is its largest urban area. The Southern and Eastern coasts with BarcelonaValencia and Málaga are more urbanised than the Northern and Western ones.

    Sweden

    [edit]

    Main article: List of urban areas in Sweden by population

    Urban areas in Sweden (tätorter) are statistically defined localities, totally independent of the administrative subdivision of the country. There are 1,956 such localities in Sweden, with a population ranging from 200 to 1,372,000 inhabitants.[53]

    United Kingdom

    [edit]

    Main article: List of urban areas in the United Kingdom

    In 2013 the United Kingdom‘s Office for National Statistics (ONS) published 2011 Built-up Areas – Methodology and Guidance which sets out its definition of a Built-up area (BUA) as an area of built-up land of at least 20 hectares (0.077 sq mi), separated from other settlements by at least 200 metres (660 ft). For 2011 census data there are 5,493 built-up areas, of which 501 are divided into Built-up area sub-divisions (BUASD) for which data is also available. Each built-up area is named algorithmically, using Ordnance Survey place-name data.[54]

    The ONS has produced census results from urban areas since 1951, since 1981 based upon the extent of irreversible urban development indicated on Ordnance Survey maps. The definition is an extent of at least 20 ha and at least 1,500 census residents. Separate areas are linked if less than 200 m (220 yd) apart. Included are transportation features.[55] The UK has five Urban Areas with a population over a million and a further sixty nine with a population over one hundred thousand.

    vteLargest urban areas of the United Kingdom
    (England and Wales: 2011 census built-up area;[56] Scotland: 2016 estimates settlement;[57] Northern Ireland: 2001 census urban area)[58]
    RankUrban areaPop.Principal settlementRankUrban areaPop.Principal settlement
    1Greater London9,787,426London11Bristol617,280Bristol
    2Greater Manchester2,553,379Manchester12Edinburgh512,150Edinburgh
    3West Midlands2,440,986Birmingham13Leicester508,916Leicester
    4West Yorkshire1,777,934Leeds14Belfast483,418Belfast
    5Greater Glasgow985,290Glasgow15Brighton & Hove474,485Brighton
    6Liverpool864,122Liverpool16South East Dorset466,266Bournemouth
    7South Hampshire855,569Southampton17Cardiff390,214Cardiff
    8Tyneside774,891Newcastle upon Tyne18Teesside376,633Middlesbrough
    9Nottingham729,977Nottingham19Stoke-on-Trent372,775Stoke-on-Trent
    10Sheffield685,368Sheffield20Coventry359,262Coventry

    Oceania

    [edit]

    Australia

    [edit]

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics refers to urban areas as Urban Centres, which it generally defines as population clusters of 1,000 or more people.[59] Australia is one of the most urbanised countries in the world, with more than 50% of the population residing in Australia’s three biggest urban centres.[citation needed][59]

    Sydney is Australia’s largest city, home to 5.3 million inhabitants.[60]

    vteLargest populated areas in Australia
    2021 data from Australian Bureau of Statistics[61]
    RankNameStatePop.RankNameStatePop.

    Sydney

    Melbourne
    1SydneyNSW5,259,76411GeelongVic289,400
    Brisbane

    Perth
    2MelbourneVic4,976,15712HobartTas251,047
    3BrisbaneQld2,568,92713TownsvilleQld181,665
    4PerthWA2,192,22914CairnsQld155,638
    5AdelaideSA1,402,39315DarwinNT148,801
    6Gold CoastTweed HeadsQld/NSW706,67316ToowoombaQld143,994
    7NewcastleMaitlandNSW509,89417BallaratVic111,702
    8CanberraQueanbeyanACT/NSW482,25018BendigoVic102,899
    9Sunshine CoastQld355,63119Albury-WodongaNSW/Vic97,676
    10WollongongNSW305,88020LauncestonTas93,332

    New Zealand

    [edit]

    Main article: Urban areas of New Zealand

    Statistics New Zealand defines urban areas in New Zealand, which are independent of any administrative subdivisions and have no legal basis.[62] There are four classes of urban area: major urban areas (population 100,000+), large urban areas (population 30,000–99,999), medium urban areas (population 10,000–29,999) and small urban areas (population 1,000–9,999). As of 2021, there are 7 major urban areas, 13 large urban areas, 22 medium urban areas and 136 small urban areas. Urban areas are reclassified after each New Zealand census, so population changes between censuses does not change an urban area’s classification.

    vteLargest cities or towns in New Zealand
    Statistics New Zealand June 2024 estimate (SSGA18 boundaries)[63]
    RankNameRegionPop.RankNameRegionPop.

    Auckland

    Christchurch
    1AucklandAuckland1,531,40011PoriruaWellington60,600
    Wellington

    Hamilton
    2ChristchurchCanterbury403,30012New PlymouthTaranaki60,100
    3WellingtonWellington214,20013RotoruaBay of Plenty58,800
    4HamiltonWaikato192,00014WhangāreiNorthland56,800
    5TaurangaBay of Plenty162,80015NelsonNelson51,300
    6Lower HuttWellington114,50016HastingsHawke’s Bay52,200
    7DunedinOtago106,70017InvercargillSouthland51,700
    8Palmerston NorthManawatū-Whanganui83,10018Upper HuttWellington45,000
    9NapierHawke’s Bay67,50019WhanganuiManawatū-Whanganui42,500
    10Hibiscus CoastAuckland67,80020GisborneGisborne38,800

    North America

    [edit]

    Canada

    [edit]

    Main article: List of the largest population centres in Canada

    According to Statistics Canada, an urban area in Canada is an area with a population of at least 1,000 people where the density is no fewer than 400 persons per square kilometre (1,000/sq mi).[64] If two or more urban areas are within 2 km (1.2 mi) of each other by road, they are merged into a single urban area, provided they do not cross census metropolitan area or census agglomeration boundaries.[65]

    In the Canada 2011 Census, Statistics Canada redesignated urban areas with the new term “population centre“;[66] the new term was chosen in order to better reflect the fact that urban vs. rural is not a strict division, but rather a continuum within which several distinct settlement patterns may exist. For example, a community may fit a strictly statistical definition of an urban area, but may not be commonly thought of as “urban” because it has a smaller population, or functions socially and economically as a suburb of another urban area rather than as a self-contained urban entity, or is geographically remote from other urban communities. Accordingly, the new definition set out three distinct types of population centres: small (population 1,000 to 29,999), medium (population 30,000 to 99,999) and large (population 100,000 or greater).[66] Despite the change in terminology, however, the demographic definition of a population centre remains unchanged from that of an urban area: a population of at least 1,000 people where the density is no fewer than 400 persons per km2.

    vteLargest metropolitan areas in Canada
    2021 Canadian census[67]
    RankNameProvincePop.RankNameProvincePop.
    1TorontoOntario6,202,22511LondonOntario543,551
    2MontrealQuebec4,291,73212HalifaxNova Scotia465,703
    3VancouverBritish Columbia2,642,82513Niagara RegionOntario433,604
    4Ottawa–GatineauOntario–Quebec1,488,30714WindsorOntario422,630
    5CalgaryAlberta1,481,80615OshawaOntario415,311
    6EdmontonAlberta1,418,11816VictoriaBritish Columbia397,237
    7Quebec CityQuebec839,31117SaskatoonSaskatchewan317,480
    8WinnipegManitoba834,67818ReginaSaskatchewan249,217
    9HamiltonOntario785,18419SherbrookeQuebec227,398
    10Waterloo RegionOntario575,84720KelownaBritish Columbia222,162

    Mexico

    [edit]

    Mexico is one of many countries where the urbanization rate is at least 80%. Mexico City, its capital, is the largest urban area in the country.

    United States

    [edit]

    Main article: List of United States urban areas

    In the United States, the Census Bureau defines urban areas and delineates urban area boundaries after each census. The Bureau defines an urban area as “a statistical geographic entity consisting of a densely settled core created from census blocks and contiguous qualifying territory that together have at least 2,000 housing units or 5,000 persons.”[68] There were 2,646 urban areas identified by the Census Bureau for 2020. 511 of these had a population of 50,000 or more.[69]

    For the 2000 and 2010 censuses, the Census Bureau differentiated between two kinds of urban areas: urbanized areas and urban clusters. The term urbanized area denoted an urban area of 50,000 or more people. Urban areas under 50,000 people were called urban clusters. Urbanized areas were first delineated in the United States in the 1950 census, while urban clusters were added in the 2000 census. The distinction between urbanized areas and urban clusters was removed for the 2020 census.[68]

    Urban areas consist of a densely-settled urban core, plus surrounding developed areas that meet certain density criteria. Since urban areas are composed of census blocks and not cities, counties, or county-equivalents, urban area boundaries may consist of partial areas of these political units. Urban areas are distinguished from rural areas: any area not part of an urban area is considered to be rural by the Census Bureau.[68]

    The largest urban area in the United States is that of New York City and its surrounding suburbs. The New York–Jersey CityNewark, NY–NJ urban area had a population of 19,426,449 as of 2020, while the larger metropolitan area had a population of 20,140,470, and the combined statistical area had a population of 23,582,649. The next five largest urban areas in the U.S. are those of Los AngelesChicagoMiamiHouston, and Dallas.[69] 80.0 percent of the population of the United States lives within the boundaries of an urban area as of the 2020 census.[70]

    The skyscrapers of New York City, the most populous city in the United States and the most populous U.S. metropolitan area, are almost all situated in Manhattan, the world’s largest central business district, seen here in this panorama in February 2018, as viewed from Weehawken, New Jersey.

    1. Riverside Church
    2. Time Warner Center
    3. 220 Central Park South
    4. Central Park Tower
    5. One57
    6. 432 Park Avenue
    7. 53W53
    8. Chrysler Building
    9. Bank of America Tower
    10. Conde Nast Building
    11. The New York Times Building
    12. Empire State Building
    13. Manhattan West
    14. a: 55 Hudson Yards, b: 35 Hudson Yards, c: 10 Hudson Yards, d: 15 Hudson Yards
    15. 56 Leonard Street
    16. 8 Spruce Street
    17. Woolworth Building
    18. 70 Pine Street
    19. 30 Park Place
    20. 40 Wall Street
    21. Three World Trade Center
    22. Four World Trade Center
    23. One World Trade Center

    The concept of Urbanized Areas as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau is often used as a more accurate gauge of the size of a city, since in different cities and states the lines between city borders and the urbanized area of that city are often not the same. For example, the city of Greenville, South Carolina has a city population just over 68,000 and an urbanized area population of around 400,000, while Greensboro, North Carolina has a city population just over 285,000 and an urbanized area population of around 300,000 — meaning that Greenville is actually “larger” for some intents and purposes, but not for others, such as taxation, local elections, etc.

    In the U.S. Department of Agriculture‘s natural resources inventory, urban areas are officially known as developed areas or urban and built-up areas. Such areas include cities, ethnic villages, other built-up areas of more than 10 ac (4 ha), industrial sites, railroad yards, cemeteries, airports, golf courses, shooting ranges, institutional and public administration sites, and similar areas. The 1997 national resources inventory placed over 98,000,000 ac (40,000,000 ha) in this category, an increase of 25,000,000 ac (10,000,000 ha) since 1982.[71]

    South America

    [edit]

    Argentina

    [edit]

    Argentina is highly urbanized.[72] The ten largest metropolitan areas account for half of the population, and fewer than one in ten live in rural areas. About 3 million people live in Buenos Aires City and the Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area totals around 15 million, making it one of the largest urban areas in the world, with a population of 18 million all up.[73]

    Córdoba has around 1.5 million people living in the urban area, while RosarioMendoza and Tucumán have around 1.2 million inhabitants each[73] and La PlataMar del PlataSalta and Santa Fe[73][74] have at least 500,000 people each.

    Brazil

    [edit]

    The following paragraph is an excerpt from List of metropolitan areas in Brazil § Definitions.[edit]

    In Brazil, the terms metropolitan area (Portugueseregião metropolitana) and urban agglomeration (aglomeração urbana) have specific meanings. They are defined by federal and state legislation as collections of municipalities focused on “integrating the organization, planning and execution of public functions of common interest”.[75] An integrated development area (região integrada de desenvolvimento) is one of the two above structures that crosses state (or Federal District) boundaries.

    Skyline of São Paulo, the largest city in Brazil

    vteLargest urban agglomerations in Brazil
    2017 Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics estimates[76][77][78]
    RankNameStatePop.RankNameStatePop.

    São Paulo

    Rio de Janeiro
    1São PauloSão Paulo21,314,71611BelémPará2,157,180
    2Rio de JaneiroRio de Janeiro12,389,77512ManausAmazonas2,130,264
    3Belo HorizonteMinas Gerais5,142,26013CampinasSão Paulo2,105,600
    4RecifePernambuco4,021,64114VitóriaEspírito Santo1,837,047
    5BrasíliaFederal District3,986,42515Baixada SantistaSão Paulo1,702,343
    6Porto AlegreRio Grande do Sul3,894,23216São José dos CamposSão Paulo1,572,943
    7SalvadorBahia3,863,15417São LuísMaranhão1,421,569
    8FortalezaCeará3,594,92418NatalRio Grande do Norte1,349,743
    9CuritibaParaná3,387,98519MaceióAlagoas1,231,965
    10GoiâniaGoiás2,347,55720João PessoaParaíba1,168,941

    Chile

    [edit]

    Chile is highly urbanized. The largest urban area in the country is its capital, Santiago.