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Metropolitan areas of Mexico

Metropolitan areas of Mexico have been traditionally defined as the group of municipalities that heavily interact with each other, usually around a core city, in Mexico. The phenomenon of metropolization in Mexico is relatively recent, starting in the 1940s.[1] Because of an accelerated level of urbanization in the country, the definition of a metropolitan area (in Mexican Spanish: zona metropolitana) is reviewed periodically by the Mexican population and census authorities.

A map showing the location of the metropolitan areas in Mexico in 2004.

Identifying metropolitan areas in Mexico edit

One of the first studies on a methodology to define and quantify the metropolitan areas in Mexico was published by El Colegio de México in 1978. In Luis Unikel's book "Urban Development in Mexico: Diagnosis and Future Implications", a metropolitan area was designated as "the territorial area that includes the political and administrative units from a central city, and any contiguous, urban political and administrative units with a direct socioeconomic interrelation with the central city, and viceversa". 12 metropolitan areas were identified, containing 25.6 percent of the national population.[2]

A 1993 study published by Mexico's National Institute of Public Administration (INAP), "Metropolitan and Regional Government and Management", defined a metropolitan area as "the physical or functional union of two or more municipalities that contain a central city and its contiguous locations, or a central city and surrounding locations under its socio-economic influence", and increased the number of metropolitan areas to 37.[1]

In 2004, a joint effort between the National Population Council (CONAPO), INEGI and the Ministry of Social Development (SEDESOL) agreed to officially define metropolitan areas as any of the following:[3]

  • a group of two or more municipalities in which a city with a population of at least 50,000 is located in an urban area that extends over the limit of the municipality that originally contained the core city incorporating, physically or under its area of direct influence other adjacent predominantly urban municipalities, all of which either have a high degree of social and economic integration or are relevant for urban politics and administration
  • a single municipality in which a city of a population of at least one thousand is located and fully contained (that is, it does not transcend the limits of a single municipality)
  • a city with a population of at least 250,000 that forms a conurbation with other cities in the United States.

The number of metropolitan areas increased to 55 under these criteria.

CONAPO last reviewed the criteria in 2018, and from that date, a metropolitan area in Mexico is defined as:[4]

  • a set of two or more municipalities where a city with a population of at least 100,000 is located, and whose urban area, functions and activities exceed the limits of the municipality, incorporating within its area of direct influence the predominantly urban neighboring municipalities, maintaining a high degree of socioeconomic integration. Also included are those municipalities that, due to their particular characteristics, are relevant to urban planning and policy for each metropolitan area.
  • municipalities with a city of more than 500,000 inhabitants.
  • municipalities with a city of more than 200,000 inhabitants located in the northern and southern border areas and in the coastal zone.
  • municipalities where state capitals are located, if they are not already included in a metropolitan area.

These new criteria also introduced two groups of municipalities within a metropolitan area: core, the location of the core city or cities in the area; and peripheral, surrounding, urban areas with high degree of integration with the core.[4]

As per this last definition, there are currently 74 metropolitan areas in Mexico. 75.1 million people, 62.8 percent of the country population, live within a metropolitan area.[4]

Metropolitan areas beyond municipal borders edit

 
Map of Greater Mexico City, the largest metropolitan area in the country

Northern states are generally divided into a small number of large municipalities, whereas central and southern states are divided into a large number of smaller municipalities. As such, metropolitan areas in the north of the country cover fewer municipalities than those in the central and southern parts.

A few metropolitan areas extend beyond the limits of one state, like Greater Mexico City (Mexico City, Mexico and Hidalgo), La Laguna (Coahuila and Durango), and Tampico (Tamaulipas and Veracruz).

Financial situation of metropolitan areas in Mexico edit

Determining the public finance of metropolitan areas in Mexico has been challenging. Metropolitan areas in Mexico are complex in terms of population and industry. The Federal government of Mexico is transferring money to Municipalities of Mexico, but metropolitan areas in Mexico are increasingly plagued by a weakening fiscal capacity and rising local debt. The political factors that undermine a local tax reform in the metropolitan areas of Mexico are not well documented.[5]

List of metropolitan areas in Mexico by population edit

Official name of each metropolitan area, area in square kilometers and number of municipalities from CONAPO.[4]

Population in 2020 from the 2020 Census,[6] population in 2010 from the 2010 Census.[7]

Rank Metropolitan area State(s) Main cities Municip. Area (km2) 2020 Census 2010 Census Change
1 Greater Mexico City Mexico City, Mexico, Hidalgo Mexico City, Ecatepec, Nezahualcóyotl 76 7,866.1 21,804,515 20,116,842 +8.39%
2 Monterrey Nuevo León Monterrey, Guadalupe, Apodaca 18 7,657.5 5,341,171 4,226,031 +26.39%
3 Guadalajara Jalisco Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlaquepaque 10 3,560.6 5,286,642 4,521,755 +16.92%
4 Puebla-Tlaxcala Puebla, Tlaxcala Puebla, Cholula, Tlaxcalancingo 39 2,392.4 3,199,530 2,728,790 +17.25%
5 Toluca Mexico Toluca, Metepec, Zinacantepec 16 2,410.5 2,353,924 2,014,091 +16.87%
6 Tijuana Baja California Tijuana, Tecate, Playas de Rosarito 3 4,422.7 2,157,853 1,751,430 +23.21%
7 León Guanajuato León, Silao 2 1,760.1 1,924,771 1,609,504 +19.59%
8 Querétaro Querétaro, Guanajuato Querétaro, El Pueblito, Apaseo el Alto 5 2,427.3 1,594,212 1,161,458 +37.26%
9 Juárez Chihuahua Ciudad Juárez 1 3,547.5 1,512,450 1,332,131 +13.54%
10 La Laguna Coahuila, Durango Torreón, Gómez Palacio, Lerdo 5 7,889.0 1,434,283 1,271,493 +12.80%
11 Mérida Yucatán Mérida, Kanasín 11 3,044.2 1,316,088 1,053,519 +24.92%
12 San Luis Potosí San Luis Potosí San Luis Potosí, Soledad 3 2,401.9 1,271,366 1,040,822 +22.15%
13 Aguascalientes Aguascalientes Aguascalientes, Jesús María 3 1,822.3 1,225,432 932,369 +31.43%
14 Mexicali Baja California Mexicali 1 15,654.0 1,049,792 936,826 +12.06%
15 Saltillo Coahuila Saltillo, Ramos Arizpe 3 14,009.3 1,031,779 823,128 +25.35%
16 Cuernavaca Morelos Cuernavaca, Jiutepec, Temixco 8 1,189.9 1,028,589 924,964 +11.20%
17 Culiacán Sinaloa Culiacán 1 6,305.0 1,003,530 858,638 +16.87%
18 Morelia Michoacán Morelia 3 1,771.2 988,704 829,625 +19.17%
19 Chihuahua Chihuahua Chihuahua 3 18,093.7 988,065 852,533 +15.90%
20 Veracruz Veracruz Veracruz, Boca del Río 6 1,888.8 939,046 811,671 +15.69%
21 Hermosillo Sonora Hermosillo 1 16,955.2 936,263 784,342 +19.37%
22 Cancún Quintana Roo Cancún 2 3,053.6 934,189 677,379 +37.91%
23 Tampico Tamaulipas, Veracruz Tampico, Ciudad Madero, Miramar 5 5,281.7 927,379 859,419 +7.91%
24 Acapulco Guerrero Acapulco 2 3,538.5 852,622 863,431 −1.25%
25 Tuxtla Gutiérrez Chiapas Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapa de Corzo 5 2,160.9 848,274 738,261 +14.90%
26 Reynosa Tamaulipas Reynosa, Río Bravo 2 4,730.6 837,251 727,150 +15.14%
27 Villahermosa Tabasco Villahermosa 2 2,253.1 833,907 755,425 +10.39%
28 Xalapa Veracruz Xalapa, Coatepec 8 1,090.0 778,139 711,369 +9.39%
29 Celaya Guanajuato Celaya, Cortázar, Comonfort 4 1,505.4 767,104 690,442 +11.10%
30 Oaxaca Oaxaca Oaxaca, Xoxocotlán 24 634.0 713,925 619,367 +15.27%
31 Durango Durango Durango 1 9,285.4 688,697 582,267 +18.28%
32 Pachuca Hidalgo Pachuca 7 1,184.8 665,929 512,196 +30.01%
33 TlaxcalaApizaco Tlaxcala Apizaco, Chiautempan, Tlaxcala 19 708.1 570,308 499,567 +14.16%
34 Matamoros Tamaulipas Matamoros 1 4,633.2 541,979 489,193 +10.79%
35 Poza Rica Veracruz Poza Rica, Coatzintla, Papantla 5 2,789.0 521,530 513,518 +1.56%
36 Mazatlán Sinaloa Mazatlán 1 2,532.6 501,441 438,434 +14.37%
37 Tepic Nayarit Tepic, Xalisco 2 2,139.0 491,153 429,351 +14.39%
38 Cuautla Morelos Cuautla, Yautepec 6 979.6 483,455 434,147 +11.36%
39 Puerto Vallarta Jalisco, Nayarit Puerto Vallarta, Valle de Banderas 2 1,452.2 479,471 379,886 +26.21%
40 Orizaba Veracruz Orizaba, Río Blanco 13 641.8 465,175 427,406 +8.84%
41 Ensenada Baja California Ensenada 1 19,346.0 443,807 466,814 −4.93%
42 Nuevo Laredo Tamaulipas Nuevo Laredo 1 1,224.0 425,058 384,033 +10.68%
43 ZacatecasGuadalupe Zacatecas Zacatecas, Guadalupe 5 1,820.2 405,285 335,947 +20.64%
44 ColimaVilla de Álvarez Colima Colima, Villa de Álvarez 5 2,287.6 380,575 334,240 +13.86%
45 MonclovaFrontera Coahuila Monclova, Frontera 4 11,495.1 374,247 339,462 +10.25%
46 Minatitlán Veracruz Minatitlán 6 2,930.3 359,228 356,137 +0.87%
47 Tehuacán Puebla Tehuacán 2 647.0 357,621 296,899 +20.45%
48 Coatzacoalcos Veracruz Coatzacoalcos 3 496.0 355,738 347,257 +2.44%
49 Tapachula Chiapas Tapachula 1 980.1 353,706 320,451 +10.38%
50 Ciudad Victoria Tamaulipas Ciudad Victoria 1 1,463.6 349,688 321,953 +8.61%
51 Chilpancingo Guerrero Chilpancingo 2 3,249.9 336,480 287,875 +16.88%
52 Córdoba Veracruz Córdoba, Fortín de las Flores 4 460.4 335,950 316,032 +6.30%
53 Campeche Campeche Campeche 1 3,244.0 294,077 259,005 +13.54%
54 La Paz Baja California Sur La Paz 1 15,838.0 292,241 251,871 +16.03%
55 Zamora Michoacán Zamora, Jacona 2 453.7 273,641 250,113 +9.41%
56 Tulancingo Hidalgo Tulancingo, Cuautepec 3 673.1 268,351 239,579 +12.01%
57 Nogales Sonora Nogales 1 1,756.6 264,782 220,292 +20.20%
58 La PiedadPénjamo Guanajuato, Michoacán La Piedad, Pénjamo 2 1,845.8 261,450 249,512 +4.78%
59 Tula Hidalgo Tula 5 1,845.8 256,795 205,812 +24.77%
60 Chetumal‡‡ Quintana Roo Chetumal 1 9,958.2 233,648 244,553 −4.46%
61 San Francisco del Rincón Guanajuato San Francisco del Rincón, Purísima 2 716.1 214,713 182,365 +17.74%
62 Piedras Negras Coahuila Piedras Negras 2 1,382.4 209,456 180,734 +15.89%
63 Guaymas Sonora Guaymas, Empalme 2 8,544.0 208,294 203,430 +2.39%
64 Delicias Chihuahua Ciudad Delicias 2 962.3 195,359 181,768 +7.48%
65 Guanajuato Guanajuato Guanajuato 1 1,014.1 194,500 171,706 +13.28%
66 Ocotlán Jalisco Ocotlán 3 1,240.3 184,603 164,256 +12.39%
67 Tianguistenco Mexico Santiago Tianguistenco 6 304.0 183,281 157,944 +16.04%
68 Tehuantepec Oaxaca Salina Cruz, Tehuantepec 5 1,712.1 179,870 182,870 −1.64%
69 Rioverde San Luis Potosí Rioverde, Ciudad Fernández 2 3,582.4 146,049 135,452 +7.82%
70 Tecomán Colima Tecomán, Armería 2 1,347.7 143,931 141,421 +1.77%
71 Teziutlán Puebla Teziutlán, Chignautla 2 240.9 138,806 122,500 +13.31%
72 Hidalgo del Parral Chihuahua Hidalgo del Parral, San Francisco del Oro 2 2,403.5 121,666 111,814 +8.81%
73 Acayucan Veracruz Acayucan, Oluta 3 830.0 114,416 112,996 +1.26%
74 MoroleónUriangato Guanajuato Moroleón, Uriangato 2 276.1 108,755 108,669 +0.08%

A new municipality, San Quintín, was created out of Ensenada's territory in February 2020.[8]

Another new municipality, Bacalar, was created out of Othon P. Blanco's territory in February 2011.[9]

Transnational conurbations edit

 
The Mexico–U.S. border separates densely populated Tijuana, Mexico (right), from San Diego, United States (left).[10][11]
 
A 3D rendered image of the Nuevo Laredo - Laredo Metropolitan Area, a binational urban agglomeration divided by the Rio Grande.

The United States shares a 2,000 mi (3,000 km) border with Mexico. It is the most frequently crossed international border in the world, with about 250 million legal crossings every year.[10]

The distribution of the population in Mexico, especially, in urban areas, has been changed significantly by the economic interaction between settlements in its north and the United States. The increasing population concentration in the north of Mexico is strongly associated with the development of the maquila industries there and the eventual economic effects of North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).[12]

Metropolitan areas at the border with the United States form transnational conurbations with deep economic and demographic interaction. For example, the San Diego – Tijuana metropolitan area consists of San Diego County in the US and the municipalities of Tijuana, Playas de Rosarito, and Tecate in Mexico. The total population of the region has been estimated to be just over 5 million in 2009, making it by far the largest binational metropolitan area shared between the US and Mexico.[13] The National Population Council (CONAPO) recognizes the existence of such metropolitan areas and defines them as the municipalities with a city of at least 200,000 inhabitants and sharing processes of conurbation with cities of the US:[3]

Mexico City megalopolis edit

 
Mexico City megalopolis location

A megalopolis is defined as a long chain of continuous metropolitan areas or territories that are relatively integrated amongst each other, a clear example being the Northeast Megalopolis in the United States. In 1996, the Programa General de Desarollo Urbano del Distrito Federal first proposed this concept to refer to the Mexico City megalopolis, or "megalopolis of central Mexico", which was later expanded by PROAIRE, a metropolitan commission on the environment.[14]

Known in the Spanish language as the corona regional del centro de México (regional ring), the megalopolis of Central Mexico was defined as the consolidation of the metropolitan areas of the Valley of Mexico, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Toluca, Pachuca, Tlaxcala, Tulancingo, Tula, Cuautla and Tianguistenco.

The Mexico City megalopolis spreads over 19,500 square kilometres (7,500 sq miles) and consists of 185 subdivisions in 6 federative entities. Furthermore, The Mexico City megalopolis spreads over 169 municipalities, of which 81 are in the State of Mexico. A further 39 are in Tlaxcala, 19 are in Puebla, 16 are in Hidalgo, 14 are in Morelos, and last but not least 16 boroughs of Mexico City.[14]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sum of legal residents of Nogales, Sonora (213,976) and Nogales, Arizona (20,833).
  2. ^ Sum of legal residents of Eagle Pass Metropolitan Area's population (48,401) and Piedras Negras, Coahuila (154,360).
  3. ^ Sum of legal residents of San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora (164,342) and San Luis, Arizona (23,810).
  4. ^ Sum of legal residents of Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila (135,605) and Del Rio, Texas (46,682).

References edit

  1. ^ a b Jaime Sobrino. "Gobierno y administración metropolitana y regional" (in Spanish). INAP. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  2. ^ Luis Unikel. "El desarrollo urbano de México: diagnóstico e implicaciones futuras" (in Spanish). El Colegio de México. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  3. ^ a b "Delimitation of the Metropolitan Areas in Mexico" (PDF) (in Spanish). CONAPO. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  4. ^ a b c d "Delimitation of Mexico's Metropolitan Areas 2015" (in Spanish). CONAPO. Retrieved 2020-12-29.
  5. ^ Alejandra Trejo Nieto; Jose L. Nino-Amezquita (2019). Metropolitan Economic Development: The Political Economy of Urbanisation in Mexico. Taylor & Francis. p. 160. ISBN 9780429850585.
  6. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020 - SCITEL" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-01-26.
  7. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2010 - Consulta" (in Spanish). INEGI. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  8. ^ "San Quintín will be the sixth municipality in Baja California" (in Spanish). El Financiero. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  9. ^ Silvia Hernández (2011-02-02). "Bacalar, el décimo municipio de Q. Roo" (in Spanish). El Universal (México). Retrieved 2011-02-05.
  10. ^ a b David M. Bridgeland, Ron Zahavi. Business Modeling: A Practical Guide to Realizing Business Value. Morgan Kaufmann, 2008. p. 134. ISBN 0-12-374151-3.
  11. ^ . U.S. Embassy Mexico. Archived from the original on 3 September 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  12. ^ Michael Pacione. Urban geography: a global perspective. Routledge, 2005. p. 105. ISBN 0415343054.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g . World Gazetteer. Archived from the original on 2007-10-01. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  14. ^ a b Área metropolitana del Valle de México PROAIRE

metropolitan, areas, mexico, have, been, traditionally, defined, group, municipalities, that, heavily, interact, with, each, other, usually, around, core, city, mexico, phenomenon, metropolization, mexico, relatively, recent, starting, 1940s, because, accelera. Metropolitan areas of Mexico have been traditionally defined as the group of municipalities that heavily interact with each other usually around a core city in Mexico The phenomenon of metropolization in Mexico is relatively recent starting in the 1940s 1 Because of an accelerated level of urbanization in the country the definition of a metropolitan area in Mexican Spanish zona metropolitana is reviewed periodically by the Mexican population and census authorities A map showing the location of the metropolitan areas in Mexico in 2004 Contents 1 Identifying metropolitan areas in Mexico 2 Metropolitan areas beyond municipal borders 3 Financial situation of metropolitan areas in Mexico 4 List of metropolitan areas in Mexico by population 5 Transnational conurbations 6 Mexico City megalopolis 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesIdentifying metropolitan areas in Mexico editOne of the first studies on a methodology to define and quantify the metropolitan areas in Mexico was published by El Colegio de Mexico in 1978 In Luis Unikel s book Urban Development in Mexico Diagnosis and Future Implications a metropolitan area was designated as the territorial area that includes the political and administrative units from a central city and any contiguous urban political and administrative units with a direct socioeconomic interrelation with the central city and viceversa 12 metropolitan areas were identified containing 25 6 percent of the national population 2 A 1993 study published by Mexico s National Institute of Public Administration INAP Metropolitan and Regional Government and Management defined a metropolitan area as the physical or functional union of two or more municipalities that contain a central city and its contiguous locations or a central city and surrounding locations under its socio economic influence and increased the number of metropolitan areas to 37 1 In 2004 a joint effort between the National Population Council CONAPO INEGI and the Ministry of Social Development SEDESOL agreed to officially define metropolitan areas as any of the following 3 a group of two or more municipalities in which a city with a population of at least 50 000 is located in an urban area that extends over the limit of the municipality that originally contained the core city incorporating physically or under its area of direct influence other adjacent predominantly urban municipalities all of which either have a high degree of social and economic integration or are relevant for urban politics and administration a single municipality in which a city of a population of at least one thousand is located and fully contained that is it does not transcend the limits of a single municipality a city with a population of at least 250 000 that forms a conurbation with other cities in the United States The number of metropolitan areas increased to 55 under these criteria CONAPO last reviewed the criteria in 2018 and from that date a metropolitan area in Mexico is defined as 4 a set of two or more municipalities where a city with a population of at least 100 000 is located and whose urban area functions and activities exceed the limits of the municipality incorporating within its area of direct influence the predominantly urban neighboring municipalities maintaining a high degree of socioeconomic integration Also included are those municipalities that due to their particular characteristics are relevant to urban planning and policy for each metropolitan area municipalities with a city of more than 500 000 inhabitants municipalities with a city of more than 200 000 inhabitants located in the northern and southern border areas and in the coastal zone municipalities where state capitals are located if they are not already included in a metropolitan area These new criteria also introduced two groups of municipalities within a metropolitan area core the location of the core city or cities in the area and peripheral surrounding urban areas with high degree of integration with the core 4 As per this last definition there are currently 74 metropolitan areas in Mexico 75 1 million people 62 8 percent of the country population live within a metropolitan area 4 Metropolitan areas beyond municipal borders edit nbsp Map of Greater Mexico City the largest metropolitan area in the countryNorthern states are generally divided into a small number of large municipalities whereas central and southern states are divided into a large number of smaller municipalities As such metropolitan areas in the north of the country cover fewer municipalities than those in the central and southern parts A few metropolitan areas extend beyond the limits of one state like Greater Mexico City Mexico City Mexico and Hidalgo La Laguna Coahuila and Durango and Tampico Tamaulipas and Veracruz Financial situation of metropolitan areas in Mexico editDetermining the public finance of metropolitan areas in Mexico has been challenging Metropolitan areas in Mexico are complex in terms of population and industry The Federal government of Mexico is transferring money to Municipalities of Mexico but metropolitan areas in Mexico are increasingly plagued by a weakening fiscal capacity and rising local debt The political factors that undermine a local tax reform in the metropolitan areas of Mexico are not well documented 5 List of metropolitan areas in Mexico by population editOfficial name of each metropolitan area area in square kilometers and number of municipalities from CONAPO 4 Population in 2020 from the 2020 Census 6 population in 2010 from the 2010 Census 7 nbsp 1 Valley of Mexico Mexico City nbsp 2 Monterrey Nuevo Leon nbsp 3 Guadalajara Jalisco nbsp 4 Puebla Puebla nbsp 5 Toluca State of Mexico nbsp 6 Tijuana Baja California nbsp 7 Leon Guanajuato nbsp 8 Queretaro Queretaro nbsp 9 Ciudad Juarez Chihuahua Rank Metropolitan area State s Main cities Municip Area km2 2020 Census 2010 Census Change1 Greater Mexico City Mexico City Mexico Hidalgo Mexico City Ecatepec Nezahualcoyotl 76 7 866 1 21 804 515 20 116 842 8 39 2 Monterrey Nuevo Leon Monterrey Guadalupe Apodaca 18 7 657 5 5 341 171 4 226 031 26 39 3 Guadalajara Jalisco Guadalajara Zapopan Tlaquepaque 10 3 560 6 5 286 642 4 521 755 16 92 4 Puebla Tlaxcala Puebla Tlaxcala Puebla Cholula Tlaxcalancingo 39 2 392 4 3 199 530 2 728 790 17 25 5 Toluca Mexico Toluca Metepec Zinacantepec 16 2 410 5 2 353 924 2 014 091 16 87 6 Tijuana Baja California Tijuana Tecate Playas de Rosarito 3 4 422 7 2 157 853 1 751 430 23 21 7 Leon Guanajuato Leon Silao 2 1 760 1 1 924 771 1 609 504 19 59 8 Queretaro Queretaro Guanajuato Queretaro El Pueblito Apaseo el Alto 5 2 427 3 1 594 212 1 161 458 37 26 9 Juarez Chihuahua Ciudad Juarez 1 3 547 5 1 512 450 1 332 131 13 54 10 La Laguna Coahuila Durango Torreon Gomez Palacio Lerdo 5 7 889 0 1 434 283 1 271 493 12 80 11 Merida Yucatan Merida Kanasin 11 3 044 2 1 316 088 1 053 519 24 92 12 San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi Soledad 3 2 401 9 1 271 366 1 040 822 22 15 13 Aguascalientes Aguascalientes Aguascalientes Jesus Maria 3 1 822 3 1 225 432 932 369 31 43 14 Mexicali Baja California Mexicali 1 15 654 0 1 049 792 936 826 12 06 15 Saltillo Coahuila Saltillo Ramos Arizpe 3 14 009 3 1 031 779 823 128 25 35 16 Cuernavaca Morelos Cuernavaca Jiutepec Temixco 8 1 189 9 1 028 589 924 964 11 20 17 Culiacan Sinaloa Culiacan 1 6 305 0 1 003 530 858 638 16 87 18 Morelia Michoacan Morelia 3 1 771 2 988 704 829 625 19 17 19 Chihuahua Chihuahua Chihuahua 3 18 093 7 988 065 852 533 15 90 20 Veracruz Veracruz Veracruz Boca del Rio 6 1 888 8 939 046 811 671 15 69 21 Hermosillo Sonora Hermosillo 1 16 955 2 936 263 784 342 19 37 22 Cancun Quintana Roo Cancun 2 3 053 6 934 189 677 379 37 91 23 Tampico Tamaulipas Veracruz Tampico Ciudad Madero Miramar 5 5 281 7 927 379 859 419 7 91 24 Acapulco Guerrero Acapulco 2 3 538 5 852 622 863 431 1 25 25 Tuxtla Gutierrez Chiapas Tuxtla Gutierrez Chiapa de Corzo 5 2 160 9 848 274 738 261 14 90 26 Reynosa Tamaulipas Reynosa Rio Bravo 2 4 730 6 837 251 727 150 15 14 27 Villahermosa Tabasco Villahermosa 2 2 253 1 833 907 755 425 10 39 28 Xalapa Veracruz Xalapa Coatepec 8 1 090 0 778 139 711 369 9 39 29 Celaya Guanajuato Celaya Cortazar Comonfort 4 1 505 4 767 104 690 442 11 10 30 Oaxaca Oaxaca Oaxaca Xoxocotlan 24 634 0 713 925 619 367 15 27 31 Durango Durango Durango 1 9 285 4 688 697 582 267 18 28 32 Pachuca Hidalgo Pachuca 7 1 184 8 665 929 512 196 30 01 33 Tlaxcala Apizaco Tlaxcala Apizaco Chiautempan Tlaxcala 19 708 1 570 308 499 567 14 16 34 Matamoros Tamaulipas Matamoros 1 4 633 2 541 979 489 193 10 79 35 Poza Rica Veracruz Poza Rica Coatzintla Papantla 5 2 789 0 521 530 513 518 1 56 36 Mazatlan Sinaloa Mazatlan 1 2 532 6 501 441 438 434 14 37 37 Tepic Nayarit Tepic Xalisco 2 2 139 0 491 153 429 351 14 39 38 Cuautla Morelos Cuautla Yautepec 6 979 6 483 455 434 147 11 36 39 Puerto Vallarta Jalisco Nayarit Puerto Vallarta Valle de Banderas 2 1 452 2 479 471 379 886 26 21 40 Orizaba Veracruz Orizaba Rio Blanco 13 641 8 465 175 427 406 8 84 41 Ensenada Baja California Ensenada 1 19 346 0 443 807 466 814 4 93 42 Nuevo Laredo Tamaulipas Nuevo Laredo 1 1 224 0 425 058 384 033 10 68 43 Zacatecas Guadalupe Zacatecas Zacatecas Guadalupe 5 1 820 2 405 285 335 947 20 64 44 Colima Villa de Alvarez Colima Colima Villa de Alvarez 5 2 287 6 380 575 334 240 13 86 45 Monclova Frontera Coahuila Monclova Frontera 4 11 495 1 374 247 339 462 10 25 46 Minatitlan Veracruz Minatitlan 6 2 930 3 359 228 356 137 0 87 47 Tehuacan Puebla Tehuacan 2 647 0 357 621 296 899 20 45 48 Coatzacoalcos Veracruz Coatzacoalcos 3 496 0 355 738 347 257 2 44 49 Tapachula Chiapas Tapachula 1 980 1 353 706 320 451 10 38 50 Ciudad Victoria Tamaulipas Ciudad Victoria 1 1 463 6 349 688 321 953 8 61 51 Chilpancingo Guerrero Chilpancingo 2 3 249 9 336 480 287 875 16 88 52 Cordoba Veracruz Cordoba Fortin de las Flores 4 460 4 335 950 316 032 6 30 53 Campeche Campeche Campeche 1 3 244 0 294 077 259 005 13 54 54 La Paz Baja California Sur La Paz 1 15 838 0 292 241 251 871 16 03 55 Zamora Michoacan Zamora Jacona 2 453 7 273 641 250 113 9 41 56 Tulancingo Hidalgo Tulancingo Cuautepec 3 673 1 268 351 239 579 12 01 57 Nogales Sonora Nogales 1 1 756 6 264 782 220 292 20 20 58 La Piedad Penjamo Guanajuato Michoacan La Piedad Penjamo 2 1 845 8 261 450 249 512 4 78 59 Tula Hidalgo Tula 5 1 845 8 256 795 205 812 24 77 60 Chetumal Quintana Roo Chetumal 1 9 958 2 233 648 244 553 4 46 61 San Francisco del Rincon Guanajuato San Francisco del Rincon Purisima 2 716 1 214 713 182 365 17 74 62 Piedras Negras Coahuila Piedras Negras 2 1 382 4 209 456 180 734 15 89 63 Guaymas Sonora Guaymas Empalme 2 8 544 0 208 294 203 430 2 39 64 Delicias Chihuahua Ciudad Delicias 2 962 3 195 359 181 768 7 48 65 Guanajuato Guanajuato Guanajuato 1 1 014 1 194 500 171 706 13 28 66 Ocotlan Jalisco Ocotlan 3 1 240 3 184 603 164 256 12 39 67 Tianguistenco Mexico Santiago Tianguistenco 6 304 0 183 281 157 944 16 04 68 Tehuantepec Oaxaca Salina Cruz Tehuantepec 5 1 712 1 179 870 182 870 1 64 69 Rioverde San Luis Potosi Rioverde Ciudad Fernandez 2 3 582 4 146 049 135 452 7 82 70 Tecoman Colima Tecoman Armeria 2 1 347 7 143 931 141 421 1 77 71 Teziutlan Puebla Teziutlan Chignautla 2 240 9 138 806 122 500 13 31 72 Hidalgo del Parral Chihuahua Hidalgo del Parral San Francisco del Oro 2 2 403 5 121 666 111 814 8 81 73 Acayucan Veracruz Acayucan Oluta 3 830 0 114 416 112 996 1 26 74 Moroleon Uriangato Guanajuato Moroleon Uriangato 2 276 1 108 755 108 669 0 08 A new municipality San Quintin was created out of Ensenada s territory in February 2020 8 Another new municipality Bacalar was created out of Othon P Blanco s territory in February 2011 9 Transnational conurbations edit nbsp The Mexico U S border separates densely populated Tijuana Mexico right from San Diego United States left 10 11 nbsp A 3D rendered image of the Nuevo Laredo Laredo Metropolitan Area a binational urban agglomeration divided by the Rio Grande The United States shares a 2 000 mi 3 000 km border with Mexico It is the most frequently crossed international border in the world with about 250 million legal crossings every year 10 The distribution of the population in Mexico especially in urban areas has been changed significantly by the economic interaction between settlements in its north and the United States The increasing population concentration in the north of Mexico is strongly associated with the development of the maquila industries there and the eventual economic effects of North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 12 Metropolitan areas at the border with the United States form transnational conurbations with deep economic and demographic interaction For example the San Diego Tijuana metropolitan area consists of San Diego County in the US and the municipalities of Tijuana Playas de Rosarito and Tecate in Mexico The total population of the region has been estimated to be just over 5 million in 2009 making it by far the largest binational metropolitan area shared between the US and Mexico 13 The National Population Council CONAPO recognizes the existence of such metropolitan areas and defines them as the municipalities with a city of at least 200 000 inhabitants and sharing processes of conurbation with cities of the US 3 Rank Metropolitan Area Mexican State American State Population1 Tijuana San Diego Baja California California 5 009 170 13 2 El Paso Juarez Chihuahua Texas 2 345 182 13 3 Reynosa McAllen Tamaulipas Texas 1 500 000 13 4 Matamoros Brownsville Tamaulipas Texas 1 136 995 13 5 Mexicali Calexico Baja California California 956 223 13 6 Nuevo Laredo Laredo Tamaulipas Texas 747 494 13 7 Nogales Nogales Sonora Arizona 234 809 nb 1 8 Piedras Negras Eagle Pass Coahuila Texas 230 205 nb 2 9 San Luis Rio Colorado San Luis Sonora Arizona 188 152 nb 3 10 Ciudad Acuna Del Rio Coahuila Texas 183 750 nb 4 Mexico City megalopolis edit nbsp Mexico City megalopolis locationMain article Mexico City megalopolis A megalopolis is defined as a long chain of continuous metropolitan areas or territories that are relatively integrated amongst each other a clear example being the Northeast Megalopolis in the United States In 1996 the Programa General de Desarollo Urbano del Distrito Federal first proposed this concept to refer to the Mexico City megalopolis or megalopolis of central Mexico which was later expanded by PROAIRE a metropolitan commission on the environment 14 Known in the Spanish language as the corona regional del centro de Mexico regional ring the megalopolis of Central Mexico was defined as the consolidation of the metropolitan areas of the Valley of Mexico Puebla Cuernavaca Toluca Pachuca Tlaxcala Tulancingo Tula Cuautla and Tianguistenco The Mexico City megalopolis spreads over 19 500 square kilometres 7 500 sq miles and consists of 185 subdivisions in 6 federative entities Furthermore The Mexico City megalopolis spreads over 169 municipalities of which 81 are in the State of Mexico A further 39 are in Tlaxcala 19 are in Puebla 16 are in Hidalgo 14 are in Morelos and last but not least 16 boroughs of Mexico City 14 See also editDemographics of Mexico List of cities in Mexico List of most populous cities in Mexico by decade List of municipalities in Mexico by population List of metropolitan areas by population List of metropolitan areas in the Americas by populationNotes edit Sum of legal residents of Nogales Sonora 213 976 and Nogales Arizona 20 833 Sum of legal residents of Eagle Pass Metropolitan Area s population 48 401 and Piedras Negras Coahuila 154 360 Sum of legal residents of San Luis Rio Colorado Sonora 164 342 and San Luis Arizona 23 810 Sum of legal residents of Ciudad Acuna Coahuila 135 605 and Del Rio Texas 46 682 References edit a b Jaime Sobrino Gobierno y administracion metropolitana y regional in Spanish INAP Retrieved 2020 12 30 Luis Unikel El desarrollo urbano de Mexico diagnostico e implicaciones futuras in Spanish El Colegio de Mexico Retrieved 2020 12 30 a b Delimitation of the Metropolitan Areas in Mexico PDF in Spanish CONAPO Retrieved 2020 12 30 a b c d Delimitation of Mexico s Metropolitan Areas 2015 in Spanish CONAPO Retrieved 2020 12 29 Alejandra Trejo Nieto Jose L Nino Amezquita 2019 Metropolitan Economic Development The Political Economy of Urbanisation in Mexico Taylor amp Francis p 160 ISBN 9780429850585 Censo de Poblacion y Vivienda 2020 SCITEL in Spanish Retrieved 2021 01 26 Censo de Poblacion y Vivienda 2010 Consulta in Spanish INEGI Retrieved 2020 12 11 San Quintin will be the sixth municipality in Baja California in Spanish El Financiero Retrieved 2020 12 30 Silvia Hernandez 2011 02 02 Bacalar el decimo municipio de Q Roo in Spanish El Universal Mexico Retrieved 2011 02 05 a b David M Bridgeland Ron Zahavi Business Modeling A Practical Guide to Realizing Business Value Morgan Kaufmann 2008 p 134 ISBN 0 12 374151 3 Borders and Law Enforcement U S Embassy Mexico Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 8 December 2009 Michael Pacione Urban geography a global perspective Routledge 2005 p 105 ISBN 0415343054 a b c d e f g Metropolitan areas in the Americas World Gazetteer Archived from the original on 2007 10 01 Retrieved 8 December 2009 a b Area metropolitana del Valle de Mexico PROAIRE Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metropolitan areas of Mexico amp oldid 1205488552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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