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San Diego–Tijuana

32°32′31.87″N 117°01′46.63″W / 32.5421861°N 117.0296194°W / 32.5421861; -117.0296194

San Diego–Tijuana
Primary urban area of San Diego–Tijuana
Countries
  • United States
  • Mexico
State
Largest city
  • by population
    by area
Principal cities
  • San Diego
  • Tijuana
Area
 • Transborder agglomeration
of the Californias
6,194 sq mi (16,040 km2)
Elevation
0 – 6,533 ft (0 – 1,991 m)
Population
 (2012 est.)[2]
 • Density1,020/sq mi (394/km2)
 • Urban
5,456,487
 • Metro
4,922,723[1]
Time zoneUTC−8 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)

San Diego–Tijuana is an international transborder agglomeration,[3] straddling the border of the adjacent North American coastal cities of San Diego, California, United States, and Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. The 2020 population of the region was 5,456,577, making it the largest bi-national conurbation shared between the United States and Mexico, and the second-largest shared between the US and another country.[1] The conurbation consists of the San Diego metropolitan area (defined as all of San Diego County), (2020 population 3,298,634)[4] in the United States and the municipalities of Tijuana (2020 pop. 1,922,523), Rosarito Beach (126,980), and Tecate (108,440) in Mexico. It is the third most populous region in the California–Baja California region, smaller only than the metropolitan areas of Greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The largest centers of the urban area maintain global city status[5] and as a whole the metropolitan region is host to 13 consulates from Asian, European, North American, Oceanian, and South American nations.[6][7] Over fifty million people cross the border each year between Tijuana and San Diego, giving the region the busiest land-border crossing in the world.[8] Since the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, San Diego–Tijuana has become a dominant commercial center in the United States and Mexico.[9] The economic success of globalization has allowed San Diego–Tijuana to grow to the third richest region in the former Californias region, with a GDP of $136.3 billion in 2002.[10][11] Renowned for natural beauty, tourism is a leading industry in the region and its coastal environs have been paramount factors in the growth of action sports-lifestyle companies. Other key industries include military, biotech, and manufacturing.

San Diego–Tijuana traces its European roots to 1542 when the land was explored by Portuguese explorers on behalf of imperial Spain. In 1601 it was mandated by the Spanish viceroy in Mexico City that safe ports be found, one of which would be San Diego Bay, for returning Spanish trade ships from Manila to Acapulco.[12] During this mission, explorer Sebastián Vizcaíno was also told to map the California coast in great detail, leading to the further exploration of the modern-day site of San Diego–Tijuana.[12] Since 2010, statewide droughts in California and in northern Mexico have further strained the San Diego–Tijuana binational region's water security.[13]

History edit

The Kumeyaay, referred to as Diegueño by the Spanish, are the original inhabitants of San Diego County and northern Baja California.[14] The Kumeyaay lived in this region for over 10,000 years as hunter-gatherers and horticulturists.[14] The boundaries of the Kumeyaay lands once extended from the Pacific Ocean, south to Ensenada, Baja California, east into the Imperial Valley and north to Warner Springs.[14] The Payomkawichum, or the Luiseño, also had a presence in modern-day North County San Diego.

Western exploration of the Californias dates back to the 16th century when in 1535 Hernán Cortés first visited the Baja California Peninsula in his search for Calafia.[15] Subsequent exploration in 1542 by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo brought the western explorers to what is now the California-Baja California region. Cabrillo first named San Diego, San Miguel. Initial expeditions by the west to the Californias were followed by pacification and conversion efforts by the Spanish Empire and the Catholic Church. The first Catholic religious order to visit the region was the Jesuits in 1683, followed by the Franciscans in 1768, and the Dominicans in the 1770s.[15] The California mission system is a reminder of the Pacific Coast's colonial era.

In 1769 Father Junípero Serra founded San Diego after occupying the Kumeyaay village of Kosa'aay and created the first of the California missions, Mission San Diego de Alcalá.[16][17] The Valley of Tijuana was explored the same year by Juan Crespí.[18] In 1829 Santiago Argüello, a Californio and a major Mexican land grant ranchos owner, obtained ownership of a parcel of land known as Rancho Tía Juana and in 1889 was Tijuana officially founded on this parcel when descendants of Argüello and Agustin Olvera, an early Los Angeles pioneer, agreed to develop the city.

 
San Ysidro Border Inspection Station in 1922

The metropolitan region was historically united as part of the province of Alta California under the Viceroyalty of New Spain. In 1821 Mexico won its independence from the Spanish crown and kept the area under the jurisdiction of Alta California. From the late 1860s Mission lands were granted as ranchos to Californio gentry. These distributions of lands accelerated after the Missions were secularized in 1833, ending the dominance of the Missions in the economy. San Diego Bay became a port of call for whalers and hide traders from the United States.

The region started depopulating, as settlements in the region began to be raided between 1836 and 1842 by the Kumeyaay resistance, with both Rancho Tía Juana (1839) and San Diego (~1840 & 1842) raided during that period.

In 1846, the Mexican–American War began and the United States continued to expand its borders under the doctrine of Manifest Destiny. As the war came to California, the Battle of San Pasqual was fought in the northern areas of modern-day San Diego. In 1848 the war ended with the Fall of Mexico City and boundaries were redrawn which created a border between San Diego and Tijuana, 3 miles (4.8 km) south of San Diego Bay. 1919 saw the implementation of Prohibition and the rapid growth of Tijuana tourism. Americans flocked to the city, which had become a major destination for the Hollywood elite, which led to the construction of the Agua Caliente Tourist Complex which in turn spurred the rise of hotels and overall growth in the city.[15]

Urban landscape edit

San Diego–Tijuana urbanity stretches along the coastline from the northernmost city of Oceanside to the southernmost city of Rosarito Beach. The urban area of San Diego–Tijuana is the 72nd largest in the world and 11th largest in North America, with a population of 5,330,000.

The highest population densities are located in the San Diego neighborhoods of University City, La Jolla, Mission Valley, Pacific Beach[19] the Downtown San Diego district of the East Village among others, and areas of Tijuana. An area of 116 census tracts in the North County region of the conurbation has a population of 615,092 and a per capita income of $44,131 which is about 50 percent more than that of California and the entire United States.[20] This area contains nearly all of the area located in the cities of Carlsbad, Encinitas, Solana Beach, and Del Mar. A part of this region are the communities of Rancho Santa Fe, Carmel Valley and La Jolla which have consistently been among the ranks of some of the richest neighborhoods in the United States.[21]

Outside of the urban centers, older regions of San Diego County south of the San Diego River, as well as La Jolla and Pacific Beach, are built on a street grid. Suburban growth north of the San Diego river were built as master planned suburban communities on top of mesas with the "city of villages" concept in mind, built around car-dependency. Tijuana's suburban landscape is made up densely packed low-density mixed land uses, with patches of street grids east of the city and more organic growth influenced by topography. Cities like Tecate and Rosarito are built on street grid systems.

 
The Downtown San Diego skyline seen at night. At 2.1 miles (3.4 km) long, the Coronado Bay Bridge stands as the longest bridge in the region and Southern California.
 
Tijuana skyline from the Colonia La Cacho

Geography edit

 
 

The metropolitan region is situated along the Pacific Coast, on the border between the United States and Mexico.[22] The region lies just south of Orange County and west of Imperial County, and shares borders with Greater Los Angeles. The area has a varied topography with over seventy miles of coastline and snow-capped mountains that rise to the northeast, in San Diego County. The terrain includes flood plains, canyons, steep hills, and mesas.[23] The region has its eastern terminus in the Colorado Desert and Imperial Valley regions, where another conurbation – Mexicali–Calexico – is formed. The urbanized area where San Diego and Tijuana meet is known as San Ysidro on the American side of the border and Colonia Federal/Colonia Libertad on the Mexican side. East from the coast ten miles (16 km), the Tijuanense boroughs of Mesa de Otay and Centenario are heavy urbanized whereas the corresponding American area of Otay Mesa is composed of primarily dispersed industrial and distribution facilities. At the Pacific Ocean region of the border, the border is urbanized on the Mexican side while the adjacent American side is an the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve, and thus not urbanized.

 
The Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, San Diego County has a total area of 4,526 square miles (11,720 km2), of that 4,200 square miles (11,000 km2) of it is land and 326 square miles (840 km2) of it (7.20%) is water. The area of Tijuana Municipality is 339.5 square miles (879 km2); the municipality includes part of the Coronado Islands, located off the coast of the municipality in the Pacific Ocean. This combined area, with the additional areas of Tecate, 1,188.8 square miles (3,079 km2), and Rosarito Beach, 198.2 square miles (513 km2), place the area of San Diego–Tijuana at 6,252.5 square miles (16,194 km2).

San Diego is by far the most populated county though population density is much higher in the immediate border area adjacent to the south in Baja California than it is in San Diego County. Urban growth is currently developing regions to the east of Tijuana Municipality and south of Rosarito Beach, where developers are building many new residential communities while in San Diego it is observed to the northeast along the Interstate 15 corridor to Temecula and Murrieta.

Greater Ensenada is more frequently than not considered part of the region given its proximity and inter-connectivity with the metropolitan area. While it is ninety and seventy-four miles (145 and 119 km) from the cities of San Diego and Tijuana respectively, recent developments between the port city and Rosarito Beach including upscale, Americanized subdivisions and resorts such as Punta Azul, Baja Mar, and La Salina have greatly increased the urbanity of the corridor between Rosarito Beach and Ensenada. Transportation infrastructure increasingly binds the region, as the under-construction Ensenada International Airport is expected to serve as the third major airport of the metropolitan region, offering flights to Europe, South America, and East Asia.[24]

Climate edit

 
June Gloom over the South Coast

San Diego–Tijuana straddles a Mediterranean climate and Semi-arid climate area.[25] The Mediterranean climate is characterized by generally warm, dry summers on the near coastal regions with a slight temperature increase westward, and relatively cool, mild, wet winters; this is the climate that dominates northern San Diego–Tijuana. In southern San Diego–Tijuana, the semi-arid climate is observed, though characteristics of the Dry-Summer Subtropical Mediterranean climate are present, with most of the annual precipitation falling in the winter.[26] The Peninsular Ranges assist in containing moisture to the coastal areas and create a rain shadow to the east as they are west-facing mountains.[27]

The climate of the area often varies significantly due to the abundance of microclimates characterizing the region. San Diego–Tijuana's topography, bays, coastal hills, mountains, canyons and gorges maintain their own climates while being relatively near to each other. During the May gray and June gloom seasons, a dense cloak of coastal clouds, known as marine layer, covers the coastal areas, keeping the area cool and moist to up to 5–10 miles (8.0–16.1 km) inland. This coastal cloud cover is frequently observed reaching as far inland as Poway and in some cases, San Diego Country Estates. Yet once outside this cloud, the weather in sharp contrast can be warm and sunny.[28] In some cases, June gloom lasts into July, creating cloudy skies over the coastal regions for entire days.[29]

An example of the regional temperature fluctuations is shown in the varying averages of downtown San Diego, averaging January lows of 50 °F and August highs of 78 °F; El Cajon, just 10 miles (16 km) northeast of downtown San Diego, averaging January lows of 42 °F and August highs of 88 °F; Tijuana, averaging January lows of 45 °F and August highs of 78 °F.[29][30][31] The differences are even more observed in North County, where coastal Oceanside maintains an average January low of 45 °F and August highs of 73 °F, while inland Escondido maintains average January lows of 42 °F and August highs of 89 °F.[32]

San Diego–Tijuana is also subject to El Niño weather events. In extreme cases, the overwhelming fall of rain creates mudslides and greatly increases the flow of urban rivers. This sudden influx of water has the potential to flood populated places and drown out wetland habitat; measures have been taken to reduce this potential negative affect while simultaneously restoring the rivers and their watersheds to a pristine and natural state.[33][34]

Ecology edit

This regional climate supports a chaparral and woodlands ecoregion that is further divided in three sub-regions where two are observed in San Diego–Tijuana.[35] These are the coastal sage and chaparral and montane chaparral and woodlands ecoregions. In the montane region, fire serves a unique purpose as a medium of change, and while fire typically can threaten urban development, it is essential for the historically annual cleanse of the woodlands and reproduction of pyrophytes.

Southern coastal sage scrub is further observed on the coast.[36] This is an ecoregion with extremely high levels biodiversity where its endemic species are endangered by human encroachment.[36] In this terrestrial ecoregion, the coastal lowlands are within a semi, semi-arid Mediterranean climate, inhabited by low-growing aromatic, and drought-deciduous shrubs.

In the water, the Intertidal, estuary and kelp forest biomes dominate the aquatic world; home to an equally diverse set of flora and fauna. The cool nutrient-rich waters of the north Pacific are able to provide kelp forests with millions of plankton – the base of the aquatic food chain – due to an upwelling of water from the deep sea in the stormy, winter months.

 
Torrey Pines State Reserve, home to Pinus torreyana torreyana, the sole location worldwide of the subspecies.

Flora and fauna edit

 
A leopard shark and two blacksmith chromis observed in kelp forest habitat at Birch Aquarium

Trees of San Diego–Tijuana included chamise, scrub oak, manzanita, live oak, lodgepole pine, black oak and closed-cone pine forests. Lowland shrubs included California sagebrush, black sage, white sage, California buckwheat, as well as cacti and succulents.

Terrestrial mammals included the mountain lion, bobcat, bighorn sheep, mule deer as well as a variety of rodents and lagomorphs including the California ground squirrel, San Diego kangaroo rat, and brush rabbit. Black bears, jaguars and sea otters historically populated the area, but their range has been restricted by human encroachment and the jaguar and the sea otter are now rarely, if ever, observed. Aquatic mammals included the gray whale, a seasonal migratory animal, as well as the bottlenose dolphin, great white shark, killer whale, and California sea lion and on rare occasion, Guadalupe fur seal. In recent times the region has seen the rebound of artiodactyls such as the Peninsular bighorn sheep, a distinct population segment of the desert bighorn sheep.[37]

Reptiles include olive ridley sea turtle, western fence lizard, various rattlesnake species and species of blind snake and gopher snake. Amphibians included the barred tiger salamander and California tree frog. With a mostly arid climate, reptile species outnumber amphibians by a margin of seven to one.[38]

Bird species popular to the region are the California quail, California condor, California least tern, peregrine falcon and golden eagle. Introduced parrot species such as the red-crowned amazon parrot have also been found living and breeding in San Diego County and parts of Tijuana Metro.[39]

The waters off of the coast of San Diego–Tijuana are densely populate by the denizens of the kelp forests. Kelp forests are found to a great extent and are populated by Garibaldi, leopard sharks, gobies, rockfish, and sculpins. Great white sharks have been observed in the waters off the coast, while there are numerous documentations of their occurrence in the waters off Guadalupe Island.[40] From the confines of the forests, ocean-going species such as the Ocean sunfish are observed.

Environmental research in climate and biodiversity is conducted at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and by the Biodiversity Research Center of the Californias of the San Diego Natural History Museum.

Geology edit

 
Mountains and faults within and near San Diego–Tijuana
 
Cerro de Las Abejas.

The land on which San Diego–Tijuana sits is due west of a major transform fault. The transform fault, known as the San Andreas Fault was created during the Cenozoic Era by the movements of the Pacific Plate and North American Plate. The region experiences earthquakes and felt the shocks of the 2009 Gulf of California earthquake and 2010 Baja California earthquake.[41][42]

The main mountain ranges of the Peninsular Ranges ridging eastern San Diego–Tijuana are the Palomar Mountains, Laguna Mountains, Sierra de Juárez, and the peaks of the Cuyumacas including Cuyamaca Peak. The highest points are located in the Lagunas at 6,378 feet (1,944 m) and in the Cuyumacas at 6,512 feet (1,985 m) while the highest is the peak of Hot Springs Mountain at 6,535 feet (1,992 m).[43][44] These mountain ranges constitute part of the Salinian Block, a largely granitic terrane dating back to the Mesozoic era and thus explaining the abundance of such stone throughout the region. Once part of the North American Plate, the Salinian block broke off due to the formation of the San Andreas Fault and rift resulting in the Gulf of California and its extension of the Salton Trough.

The faults nearest the urban area are the Elsinore and Laguna Salada faults, both secondary to the San Andreas fault.

Major coastal water bodies edit

The region is set with many natural coastal harbors, estuaries, inlets, lagoons, and bays. These included the major water bodies known as:

Populace edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
19903,245,397
20004,129,43327.2%
20105,105,76923.6%
historical data source:[45]

The populace of the San Diego–Tijuana is cosmopolitan in that many cultures and ethnic groups are present. A large transitory population exists due to Tijuana's border proximity to the United States. This location draws many Latin Americans,[46] including Argentines, Cubans, Guatemalans, and Andean nationalities, as well as Chinese, Korean, and Japanese people; Italian, French, Spanish and Lebanese also reside in the region. With a population of approximately five million people, the San Diego–Tijuana metropolitan area accounts for 40% of the United States – Mexico border population.[47] The metropolitan area experiences the largest rates of growth in an urban area that stretches from Los Angeles to Tijuana.[47] An analysis of age groups in the region found a relatively older population lives on the San Diegan side of the border while a relatively younger population the Tijuana side.[47] The Tijuana region also maintains a population largely composed of people born outside of Baja California.[47]

Cities edit

 
Tijuana, the largest city in the region
 
San Diego from Balboa Park, the second largest city in the region
 
Chula Vista Bayfront of Chula Vista, 3rd largest city in the region
 
Oceanside Pier of Oceanside, 4th largest city in the region
San Diego & Tijuana

San Diego is located at 32°42′N 117°09′W / 32.700°N 117.150°W / 32.700; -117.150, just north of Tijuana. The city is divided into eight districts by the municipal government of the City of San Diego in accordance with policing and community service areas.[48] The city lies south of North County, and west of East County, while also being north of parts of South Bay. Though the city boundaries grace Tijuana's, Centre City lies approximately 18 miles (29 km) north of Tijuana. San Diego has deep canyons separating its mesas, creating small pockets of natural parkland scattered throughout the city. This makes San Diego a hilly city. The Coronado and Point Loma peninsulas separate San Diego Bay from the ocean.

Tijuana is located at 32°31′N 117°01′W / 32.517°N 117.017°W / 32.517; -117.017, just south of San Diego. The city is divided into nine administrative boroughs, which are in turn divided into neighborhoods. These boroughs offer administrative services such as urban planning, civil registry, inspection, verification, public works and community development, served by a delegate. As Tijuana ranks higher in the Mexican urban hierarchy than San Diego does in the American urban hierarchy, Tijuana contains many foreign consulates including those of China, Korea, Finland, the United States, Germany, Spain, Honduras, France, Austria, Gambia, the United Kingdom, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Israel, Canada, and the Czech Republic. Tijuana does not receive competition from a larger urban center as San Diego does from Los Angeles. However, with Mexicali growing rapidly, a possible canal project planned and Silicon Border development under way, Tijuana will soon face similar competition.

Population figures for California cities are from 2010 U.S. Census data.[49] Population figures for Baja California cities are from 2010 INEG census data.[50]

Major cities – 100,000+ inhabitants
Other cities – 40,000+ inhabitants
Cities with under 40,000 inhabitants

Mexico – United States border edit

 
Beach at Border State Park; San Diego is on the right while Tijuana is on the left.
 
Border fence between Tijuana (right) and San Diego's border patrol offices (left)
 
Otay Mesa Port of Entry pedestrian facility
 
US-Mexico border crossing from the American side.

The international border between the United States and Mexico runs from San Diego–Tijuana eastward towards the Gulf of Mexico. The Pacific Ocean terminus of the border was defined as a line passing from the confluence of the Colorado and Gila rivers (now the southeastern corner of the U.S. State of California) to the Pacific Ocean such that it would pass one Spanish league south of the southern end of San Diego Bay. This ensured that the United States received the natural harbor at San Diego.

There are three existing border crossings in San Diego–Tijuana, with two more planned. San Ysidro/El Chaparral is the busiest border crossing in the world;[51] In 2019 alone, more than 77.2 million people entered the U.S. through this port.[52] There are maximum 30 vehicle border crossing lanes at the San Ysidro Port of Entry into the United States and 6 or 8 lanes into Mexico from San Ysidro.[53] The San Diego/Tijuana border is also a major point of entry for trafficking, where 50 brothels of trafficked Mexican girls exist in San Diego County.[54]

The majority of cross-border trips into the United States are those made by commuters into the Greater San Diego area and Southern California as a whole. There is a thriving reverse traffic for entertainment in Tijuana and affordable goods and services.

The San Ysidro port of entry is the main border crossing for non-commercial traffic. Crossing times are notoriously slow at San Ysidro, particularly for those entering the U.S. in cars.[53] Given delays frequently experienced upon entry to Mexico, many cross-border travelers choose to cross on foot.[53] Infrastructure on both sides of the border delivers travelers and commuters to border crossings via respective public transportation systems of which includes the San Diego Trolley blue line that runs from downtown San Diego to the border crossing.

Economy edit

Leading industries in San Diego–Tijuana are trade, services, electronics, tourism, life sciences, high-tech and defense sectors.[55] In 2002 San Diego and Tijuana had a gross regional product of $136.3 Billion;[55] and in 2007 this figure increased to $176 Billion.[56] The greater San Diego area has a knowledge-based economy that is only growing; Tijuana's sub-metropolitan region is reliant on a diversified manufacturing sector.[10] Leading private employers to the metropolitan region are Qualcomm, SAIC, Sempra Energy, Sony, Kyocera, Pfizer Global Research & Development, Callaway Golf, Sharp Healthcare, Scripps Health, Sanyo, Hitachi, Panasonic Corporation, Samsung, Hyundai, Mattel, Honeywell, Pioneer Corporation, Maxell, Douglas Furniture, and International Rectifier.[55]

On the 2020 Globalization and World Cities classification, San Diego was rated as Beta - level global city up from Gamma level, while Tijuana was rated as a high sufficiency city.

Maritime edit

The economy of the urban area is influenced by the Port of San Diego which gives the region a strong maritime sector; the conurbation is the location of the only major submarine and shipbuilding yards on the West Coast and of the largest naval fleet in the world. The cruise ship industry, which is the second largest in the California-Baja California region, generates an estimated $2 million annually from the purchase of food, fuel, supplies, and maintenance services.[57] In California alone, the port is the fastest-growing port in terms of cruise ship dockings and the second largest behind the Port of Los Angeles.[57]

Manufacturing edit

 
An industrial park in Tijuana's outskirts

Manufacturing accounts for a large part of the regional economy more-so observed in Tijuana.[10] The focus of manufacturing in the region is on soft and hard technological products.[58] In metropolitan Tijuana, manufacturing has historically allotted for a large sector of the economy[59] and San Diego County's economy has increasingly focused on manufacturing which 2002 allotted for $25 billion of the county's economic income.[60] The 2000s decade saw Tijuana overtake the Twin Cities as medical device manufacture capital of North America.[61] The amount of diverse and numerous manufacture companies in the area have made the metropolitan region one of the world's largest concentrated manufacturing areas.[58]

Tech edit

 
Qualcomm Corporate Headquarters

San Diego–Tijuana is ground zero for a transborder tech sector.[62] Engineers and entrepreneurs in the entirety of the border region are fueling the growth of this economic industry in which a symbiotic relationship exists between think-tanks in the north and manufacturing heads in the south that creates a healthy environment for startup companies.[62] San Diego alone was rated by Forbes in 2014 as one of the best places to start a tech company.[63]

Several areas of San Diego are home to offices and research facilities for numerous biotechnology companies and pharmaceutical companies. Among American metropolitan areas, metropolitan San Diego is the third largest concentrated area of high technology and biotechnology businesses.[60] The presence of University of California, San Diego and other research institutions helped fuel biotechnology growth. In June 2004, San Diego was ranked the top biotech cluster in the U.S. by the Milken Institute.[64] San Diego is home to companies that develop wireless cellular technology. Qualcomm Incorporated was founded and is headquartered in San Diego; Qualcomm is the largest private-sector technology employer (excluding hospitals) in San Diego County.[65] Due to San Diego's military influence, major national defense contractors, such as General Atomics and Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), are or have been headquartered in San Diego.

Major business districts edit

Business districts include the Core Columbia district of Downtown San Diego, the Rio Zone in Tijuana, the Rancho Bernardo, Carmel Valley, Mission Valley, Sorrento Mesa, and University City neighborhoods of San Diego. Notability among business districts extends to Rancho Bernardo, the site of Sony US corporate headquarters.[66]

Tourism edit

 
 
Pacific Beach, a popular destination for beachgoers
 
 
Avenida Revolución, one of Tijuana's prime entertainment districts.

Tourism is a major industry of the region, owing much to the area's mild Mediterranean climate. Tijuana alone is the most visited city in the Western Hemisphere, second only to New York City.[67] 50,000,000 people visit the city each year and about 300,000 visitors cross by foot or car from the San Ysidro point of entry to Tijuana every day.[67] Balboa Park, the San Diego Zoo, SeaWorld, the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, Legoland, the city's beaches, and golf tournaments hosted in the region such as the Farmers Insurance Open are just some of the major tourist destinations in the conurbation. Mexico's drinking age of 18 and legal and regulated prostitution make Tijuana a common weekend destination for many young Southern Californians and sex tourists.[68]

Popular attractions in the region include:

 
Interior of a bar in Tijuana

Many large luxury hotels line the San Diego Bay and coast at Playas de Tijuana. The Bay and its marinas are surrounded by more than fifteen hotels while historic buildings such as the Hotel del Coronado and Rosarito Beach Hotel lie on the Coronado Peninsula and Rosarito coast. In Playas, Baja Mar, and Baja Malibu, several luxury hotels and condominiums can be found lining the coast in customary beach resort fashion, including Park Towers and AQUA condominiums.[69]

Cross-border Trade & NAFTA edit

The North American Free Trade Agreement has a great influence on transborder trade in the San Diego–Tijuana economy. Of all the goods exchanged to the north 20% transported are destined for San Diego, 60% are destined for other California counties, and the remaining 20% are destined to other American states.[70] The metropolitan economy has become increasingly integrated as the NAFTA process has reduced trade and investment barriers which facilitates the trade and extensive sales services via cross-border exchange.[71] San Diego–Tijuana is a critical commercial link to the United States.[10][59] In Tijuana, companies that have established assembly plants in industrial parks referred to as maquiladoras include Sony, Toyota, Samsung, Kodak, Matsushita/Panasonic, Nabisco, Philips, Pioneer, Plantronics, Pall Corporation, Tara Labs, and Sanyo, while San Diego supports the expansion of its own industrial parks in Otay Mesa.[59] Additionally some of these companies, such as Samsung, source the development of items locally.[72]

Even prior to the implementation of NAFTA, Tijuana was home to many businesses selling products and services at a lower rate than in the United States. Today businesses such as auto detailing, medical services, dentistry and plastic surgery are heavily marketed and located near Tijuana's border with San Diego. In addition, there are high-tech firms and telemarketing companies, including Medtronic Inc., in the city.[73][74] This influx of companies is drawing skilled people from the United States with technical trades and college degrees to Tijuana transforming the city economy into a knowledge-based one.

Transportation edit

Public transportation edit

 
San Diego Trolley Blue Line heading towards Tijuana

San Diego's primary light rail network is the San Diego Trolley, operated by Metropolitan Transit System. The trolley system consist of four lines: the Blue Line which runs from the San Ysidro Transit Center just north of the border to UTC Transit Center, tzhe Orange Line, which runs from Courthouse station to Santee Town Center, the Green Line which runs 12th & Imperial Transit Center to Santee Town Center through Mission Valley, and the Silver Line which is a heritage streetcar line that runs in a loop in downtown San Diego.

San Diego is served by the Pacific Surfliner, an Amtrak inter-city rail which terminates at Santa Fe Depot in downtown San Diego. San Diego is also served by the COASTER, a commuter rail service that runs from downtown San Diego to Oceanside, operated by North County Transit District. From Oceanside Transit Center, riders can either take the SPRINTER hybrid rail to Escondido, Metrolink Orange County line to downtown Los Angeles, or the Metrolink San Bernardino line to San Bernardino.

Plenty of free parking is available at Stadium station on days when Snapdragon Stadium is not hosting events, as well as several other stations throughout the system that have park and rides. All trolley stations also provide connection points to MTS bus services, as MTS has designed the trolley to be the backbone of the local public transit system.

In Tijuana there is currently no public rail system, although, there is a system of buses that operate in the area. However, it was reported by the San Diego Union-Tribune that San Diego officials desired that the California High-Speed Rail be extended to Tijuana and South Bay in order to capitalize on the potential economic benefits.[75] Additionally, there have been plans to extend the Blue Line into Tijuana proper.[76]

Major highways edit

 
Cabrillo Freeway (SR 163) leading into Downtown San Diego

San Diego–Tijuana is at the junction of major interstates, state routes and federal highways. The region is at the terminus of ten major Interstates and Federal Highways. Radiating to the east and south are connections to the Imperial Valley, Mexicali Valley, and the Arizona Sun Corridor via Interstate 8, the Inland Empire, the Las Vegas Strip and metropolitan area and Salt Lake City via Interstate 15;[77] and to the Greater Ensenada area via Federal Highway 1D. To the north and west the area is connected to the Los Angeles metropolitan area, Northern California, and Cascadia via Interstate 5. Interstate 5 and Federal Highway 1 are critical highways for commercial and international trade due to their junction at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, linking major industrial regions along the British Columbia Coast, West Coast of the United States, and the Gold Coast of Baja California at the busiest port of entry in the world.[78] The metropolitan area is linked by Federal Highway 2 and State Route 111 to Gulf of Mexico cities.[79]

Within the metropolitan region, there are many transportation routes via highway. These included Interstate 805, connecting Tijuana to Del Mar.[80] Many highways have a terminus in South Bay and run north and west towards other agglomerations such as the Inland Empire and Los Angeles metropolitan area.[81] State Routes that link to these urban areas include State Route 79 and State Route 78. San Diego–Tijuana is linked to Ensenada by various ways as well; including Federal Highway 3, Federal Highway 1 and Federal Highway 1D, running from the border cities of Tijuana and Tecate to the Cinderella of the Pacific.[82]

 
A Federal Highway in Tijuana's North
 
Highway that connects Tijuana and Ensenada, locally known as "La Escénica"

In addition to the extensive highway system, the cities and regions within San Diego–Tijuana are interconnected by many state routes as well. State Route 52 connects communities in northern San Diego, State Route 905 connects the Otay Mesa Port of Entry with South Bay cities, State Route 125 connects South Bay with East County, State Route 94 connects South Bay with the Mountain Empire, and State Route 78 connects North County Coastal with North County Inland, as well as to the mountain communities of the San Diego County Peninsular Ranges.

San Diego has a major network of roads, predominantly free Highways with several toll roads, and Interstates. Interstate 5 runs south from the Canadian-border city of Vancouver and terminates at the San Ysidro International border where it becomes Federal Highway 1. Another major freeway is Interstate 8 that runs west from the Arizona Sun Corridor at Casa Grande, Arizona and terminates at Ocean Beach in San Diego. The roadway system in Tijuana is very low end compared to the quality of streets in the United States. The majority of the roads are in desperate need of repair with many newly constructed off ramps being set up in an impractical method often requiring sharp and hard turns. When it comes to long-distance travel through Baja California, many people use the toll roads that are well maintained and are at a standard comparable to that of U.S. roads.

Port edit

 
San Diego is a port of call for nine cruise lines
 
Dole Honduras at the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal container port.

San Diego–Tijuana's only deepwater port is both a container port and cruise ship destination. The Port of San Diego has recreation terminals and docked ships at the Maritime Museum of San Diego, which is located at the Embarcadero. The port is serviced by nine cruise lines including Carnival Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean International. A new cruise terminal was recently constructed at the Port to compensate for the increased levels of maritime tourism.

Cargo and container terminals are located to the south of the Embarcadero where two marine cargo facilities are administered. The Port of San Diego was ranked by the United States' Bureau of Transportation Statistics as one of America's top 30 U.S. container ship ports in 2007. The Port also serves as the primary port of entry for larger car corporations including Honda, Volkswagen, and Nissan into the United States of America. The nearby Port of Ensenada also serves as a transport point where cruise ships arrive and depart from Southern Californian, European, and Central American ports.[83] Cargo arriving at the Port of Ensenada is also transported to the metropolitan region via the Tijuana-Ensenada Freeway.[84]

The Port of Punta Colonet is being planned as an alternative port to the West Coast ports of the United States and Canada;[85] though the port is not without its negative environmental impacts.[86] 150 miles (240 km) south of Tijuana, the port is intended to compete with the twin ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles,[87] Once completed the port would serve as the primary dock for Asian vessels unloading shipping containers.[87] and would have a 200-mile (320 km) rail line to San Diego–Tijuana.

Airports edit

San Diego–Tijuana is served by of two major international airports: the San Diego International Airport (Lindbergh Field) and Tijuana International Airport (General Abelardo L. Rodríguez), and one regional airport McClellan-Palomar Airport (Carlsbad).

San Diego International Airport is located 3 mi (4.8 km) northwest of Centre City and 20 mi (32 km) from Tijuana. Operated by the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority,[88] the airport is the busiest single-runway commercial airport in the world. SAN served 22,009,921 in 2021. As of June 2023, San Diego International Airport is served by 16 passenger airlines.[89]

In 2022 the Tijuana International Airport served 12,324,600 passengers. It is the fourth busiest airport in Mexico and serves as the focus city for Aeroméxico. Cross Border Xpress consists of a pedestrian toll bridge which directly links the terminal in Mexico with the CBX terminal on the U.S. side – the only airport in the world with terminals on the territory of two countries.

McClellan-Palomar Airport is located near the central business district of Carlsbad, serving North County. However, the airport does not currently have any passenger service.

The top ten flights in 2022 to 2023 from all three airports were to Mexico City with 1,191,875 passengers, Guadalajara with 1,068,321 passengers, Las Vegas with 837,000 passengers, Denver with 704,000 passengers, San Jose with approximately 661,000 passengers, Sacramento with 654,000 passengers, Phoenix with 641,000 passengers, San Francisco with 625,000, Seattle/Tacoma with 610,000 passengers, Dallas/Fort Worth with 532,000 passengers.[90][91]

Ports of Entry edit

San Ysidro Port of Entry
 
 
Traffic at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, the busiest international border crossing in the world

In 2002, according to the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG), the number of trucks driving north through the Otay Mesa Port of Entry numbered over 725,710, representing approximately $20 billion worth of freight.[70] Over time congestion has increased as the population of the region has grown at a high rate. San Diego and Tijuana have both begun collaborative renovation plans in order to ease border congestion.[92] The San Ysidro Land Port of Entry Expansion Project involves adding ten lanes to the San Ysidro border crossing and the creation of the El Chaparral Port of Entry.[93] Another plan includes adding an extra border crossing to the east of Otay Mesa with completion estimated for the year 2015.[94] Projects such as these will attempt to reduce the loss of millions of dollars per day due to waiting at the border.[92]

There are currently three ports of entry serving the metropolitan region. The San Ysidro Port of Entry/El Chaparral expansion projects, and the opening of the new Otay Mesa East Port of Entry, will add significant capacity. The most trafficked port of entry is the San Ysidro Port of Entry—the busiest international crossing in the world. It serves as the primary entry point for the commuting populace of the metropolitan region. The Cross Border Xpress pedestrian border crossing, which opened December 9, 2015, is for the exclusive use of ticketed passengers at Tijuana International Airport. Further east, the Otay Mesa Port of Entry deals with high volumes of commercial traffic as it is located in the manufacturing zone of the region. The Otay Mesa Port accounts for billions of dollars worth of product.[70] Further east, the Otay Mesa East Port of Entry is planned. And the farthest east, the Tecate Port of Entry is the smallest port of entry and is not designed for dealing with large volumes of traffic as it follows a long winding road through the Mountain Empire.

Many businesses in South Bay offer Mexican car insurance on a short-term, prepaid basis. Most large car rental companies in San Diego do permit their vehicles to be taken across the border but generally require a hefty fee, sometimes costing more than the rental, for Mexican auto insurance. Visitors to the region should note that automobile insurance does not travel across the international border. Vehicles registered in Mexico may also require separate insurance for use in the United States. In California Automobile insurance is required by the State.

Higher education edit

The region is home to over twenty higher education schools including numerous universities, private, and state colleges and maintains an excellent educational infrastructure.[95] Tijuana is home to high ranked national colleges and universities and San Diego is ninth most educated city in the United States.[96]

Notable schools included the Autonomous University of Baja California (Tijuana campus); Ibero-American University (Tijuana campus); CETYS University (Tijuana campus); University of San Diego (USD); San Diego State University; University of California, San Diego (UCSD); California Western School of Law; and Thomas Jefferson School of Law. Of the colleges in San Diego–Tijuana, UCSD is the highest ranked college; ranking as 14th best university in the world by the Academic Ranking of World Universities and in 2010 ranking as the top university in the United States by The Washington Monthly.[97]

Communication edit

Telephone edit

 
Area codes of the metropolitan area

Telephonic communication between the two cities requires international calling. To call Tijuana from the United States, "011" (the US international call prefix) must be dialed followed by Mexico's country calling code "52"; to call San Diego from Mexico, "00" (the ITU prefix) must be dialed followed by "1" (the North American Numbering Plan calling code). Then the caller will in both cases proceed to dial the area code and the local number.

San Diego County Area Codes

Tijuana Metro Area Codes

  • +52-665
  • +52-664
  • +52-661

Broadcasting edit

Limited San Diego television channels are included in Mexican cable in Tijuana and Ensenada.

Broadcasting is shared between the two cities as necessary, as is the case along both land U.S. borders. Frequency coordination means that all broadcast stations must be approved by both countries before making any major changes. In this case, approval is required by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S. and Federal Telecommunications Institute in Mexico. Additionally, the FCC requires a permit to supply programming to a foreign broadcaster for transmission back into the U.S.

Television edit

Cooperative frequency coordination between both city regions is quite common; an example is XETV-TV 6, a Tijuana-based television station used to target audiences in San Diego until its US-based studio closure in 2017, where the K being replaced by the X as an indicator that it is a Mexican-licensed station. These stations were not required to shut down their NTSC analog TV operations in June 2009, as full-powered FCC-licensed stations must. In 2007, a bill in the U.S. Congress called the DTV Border Fix Act was introduced, which would have allowed all stations in San Diego, and all television stations within 80 kilometers (50 mi) of the Mexican border, to keep their analog signals active for another five years, delaying the television transition that the rest of the United States would be going through; while the bill passed the Senate, it did not pass the House.[98]

Prior to the 2017 rules change by the FCC, San Diego was the largest media market in the United States that was legally unable to support a duopoly between two full-power television stations; under the 1999 order, duopolies were not allowed in any U.S. market with fewer than nine full-power stations and once a duopoly is formed, there must be eight unique station owners that remain in a single market. The California side of the market does not fall under either requirement as there are only seven full-power stations in that part of the San Diego–Tijuana metropolitan area. Though two sister stations existed (the E. W. Scripps Company group of KGTV and KZSD-LD, and the NBC Owned Television Stations group of KNSD and KUAN-LD), they are not considered duopolies under the FCC's legal definition as common ownership between full-power and low-power television stations in the same market is permitted regardless to the number of stations licensed to the area. On November 20, 2017, the FCC eliminated the "Eight-Voices Test" requirement, allowing media companies to form duopolies regardless of the number of full-powered stations licensed to each market.[99] The decision allowed Nexstar Media Group, owner of Fox affiliate KSWB-TV, to purchase independent station KUSI-TV from McKinnon Broadcasting on May 8, 2023;[100] the transaction was completed on August 31, creating the first legal duopoly in San Diego.[101]

The Mexico-licensed stations in the market are not subject to the duopoly rules as two or more full-power television stations are allowed to be owned by the same company under Mexican telecommunications law (American-based TelevisaUnivision owns three stations in Tijuana: XETV-TV, XHUAA-TV and XEWT-TV, while Entravision Communications and TV Azteca each own two stations: XHAS-TV and XHDTV-TV, and XHJK-TV and XHTIT-TV, respectively).

Radio edit

On radio, relaying programming across the border is even more common, with stations like XHITZ-FM 90.3 and XHMORE-FM 98.9 being programmed by U.S. broadcast groups, while being owned by Mexican companies (as required under Mexican law) and operating under Mexican broadcast law. Other American stations relayed via Mexico through local marketing agreements (LMAs) are XEPE AM 1700, XEPRS AM 1090 and simulcast XHPRS-FM 105.7, XESPN AM 800, XESURF AM 540, XETRA FM 91.1, XHRM FM 92.5, XEWW-AM 690, XHA-FM 94.5, XHFG-FM 107.3, XHGLX-FM 91.7, XHLNC-FM 104.9, and XHTY-FM 99.7. All of these stations are authorized to simulcast digitally in HD Radio, as are other stations within 320 kilometers (200 mi) of the U.S. border.[102]

Because many stations in the reserved band (FM below 92 MHz) are used by Mexican stations, other specific allotments are reserved for non-commercial educational (NCE) radio stations in the San Diego area. However, the lack of such allotments still leaves the area with no college radio stations available except via Internet radio, cable radio, LPAM, and TV SAP. These are KCR from San Diego State University, and KSDT from University of California, San Diego.

Under Mexican law, radio stations located in Mexico must broadcast the Mexican National Anthem twice daily and broadcast public affairs program La Hora Nacional on Sunday evenings.

Other infrastructure edit

 
Sempra Corporate Headquarters in San Diego

The metropolitan region has developed many utilities which have primary focus on energy and environmental health. A focal point of cross-border environmental relations is the care of the Tijuana River Estuary. The International Boundary Wastewater Treatment Plant (IWTP) was developed by the International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC) as a joint project between the US and Mexico in the mid-1990s following substantial environmental studies regarding the polluting effects of the river system from run-off and untreated water on the Tijuana side of the border region.[103] The facility now treats sewage flows exceeding the capacity of the present Tijuana sewage treatment system.[104] The plant directly assists in the restoration of the Tijuana River Valley.[104] Another collaborative effort between the two cities was the environmentally friendly development of paved roads – created by placing concrete blocks on dirt roads – in the San Bernardo neighborhood of northwestern Tijuana.[105] Whilst being a good example for overall development of Tijuana, it served to retain water in the earth and prevented possible negative impacts from floodwater.

Water edit

San Diego–Tijuana relies heavily on water from the Colorado River.[70] Approximately half of San Diego–Tijuana's fresh water is used for non-drinking purposes, including landscape irrigation, commercial enterprise, and industrial processing.[70] Methods such as saltwater desalination provides options for obtaining fresh water. Cities in the metropolitan region such as Carlsbad have begun desalination projects of their own, without a bi-national conference. The Carlsbad desalination plant is the largest desalination plant in the United States. It was opened in December 2015, and produces 50-million gallons a day; enough water to supply 10% of San Diego region residents with drinking water.[106]

Energy edit

The policies shared between San Diego and Tijuana are addressed in a binational way as the effects of actions on one side of the border, with regard to infrastructure, are felt on the neighboring side.[107] In the past decade San Diego–Tijuana has developed new cooperative strategies to make energy consumption more efficient and effectively supply energy.[108] In 2000 Sempra Energy constructed a natural gas pipeline to provide energy to a thermal power plant in Rosarito; also the principle plant in Baja California.[108][109] The region was able to reduce levels of air pollution substantially when the conversion to a natural gas fired electrical generation facility was completed.[108][109] In the Baja California subregions, unleaded gasoline has also replaced leaded fuel as means for transportation, helping regional air quality.[108] The new strategies also included plans that worked with the nearby capital of Mexicali, where the pipeline shared between the two states was constructed to supply natural gas to its metropolitan area with energy supplied by Sempra and Proxima.[108] Sempra Energy has been applauded for its initial development of this cross-border infrastructure.[110]

On April 19, 2011, it was reported by the San Diego Union-Tribune that San Diego Gas and Electric signed a twenty-year deal with Sempra Generation to obtain power generated by the Energia Sierra Juarez Project, a wind farm of 450 wind turbines, taking up an area predominantly in the Tecate region of Baja California larger than Anza Borrego Desert State Park.[111] Energia Sierra Juarez is slated for construction in 2012, though the deal has yet to be approved by the California Public Utilities Commission.[111]

Culture edit

 
Tijuana's House of Culture

The sister cities of the metropolitan region have a complex and rich cultural exchange. The binational art communities are the most progressive yet least funded when compared to other international communities.[112]

The cultural activities present on both sides of the border provide artists a benefited cultural activity sector. Art organizations on both sides of the border have binational programs. Mainly Mozart (Festival Binacional de Mozart) performs, for both cities of California and Baja California, with internationally known musicians and orchestras.[112] In San Diego, the Opera's Ensemble tours the metropolitan region every year performing over 150 performances in the regions educational institutions, cultural centers, and concert venues.[112] Additionally, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego actively promotes the binational arts culture in the area and has displayed exhibitions highlighting the border experience.[112]

The metropolitan region has become a magnet for artists from abroad. Musicians and visual artists from Russia, Mexico, and Eastern Europe are now found in organizations such as the Orchestra of Baja California.[112]

The cultural region is the home of many museums and landmarks. The regions cultural institutions and landmarks are in part comprised by the many institutions of Balboa Park, Tijuana Cultural Center, the Maritime Museum of San Diego – a collection of large historic American vessels, Cabrillo National Monument, Christ of the Sacred Heart, Mission San Diego de Alcalá, Mission San Luis Rey de Francia, Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, and museum at San Pasqual Battlefield State Historic Park. Local beach culture is in part represented by the California Surf Museum.

Border influence edit

 
The Caesar salad finds roots in the cross border culture of 1920s American Prohibition, when San Diegans would take trips to Tijuana to legally consume alcohol. Caesar salad was invented by an Italian immigrant living in San Diego who owned a popular restaurant for drinking in Tijuana. Today, young San Diegans under 21 still cross into Tijuana for the 18 years old drinking age.

In a region where Mexican traditional culture and American contemporary culture clash, native artists benefit from the manifested diverse cultural influences.[112]

Tijuana's adjacent location to San Diego fuels its intrigue for artists and art curators.[112] A growing number of artists and musicians have begun challenging the sometimes negative stereotype of Tijuana through exhibitions displaying the city as a place of contingency and creativity.[112] San Diego–Tijuana has been considered "one of the hottest interfaces between first and third worlds."[113] Artists attraction to San Diego–Tijuana's arts and culture scene was accredited by the Tucson Weekly to the environment created by one of the richest and most developed cities – San Diego – border proximity to a once third world type city – Tijuana.[114]

Cuisine edit

Food in the region has been greatly attributed from its position on the US-Mexican border. The region has also been influenced by immigrants who migrated to the area.

Notable foods rooted in the region are:

Beverage edit

The region is also home to many wineries and craft breweries scattered throughout the region, with San Diego's craft brewery industry, Tijuana's proximity to the wineries in Valle de Guadalupe, and Tecate's Cerveza Tecate owned by Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma Brewery. Tijuana and Tecate's growth could be attributed to the influx of American alcohol tourism in the 1920s to evade the US prohibition of alcohol.

International recognition edit

The culture of San Diego–Tijuana is international and cosmopolitan, reflecting the values of each city. Tijuana's emerging vibrant culture scene plays and undeniable role in the art enrichment of its neighborhoods.[112] The metropolitan regions southern anchor city, Tijuana, was identified by Newsweek International as one of the top eight creative cities in the world.[112] It was recognized for its amalgamation of traditional Mexican Norteño music by cities as far away as Tokyo and Berlin.[115] Berlin's Haus der Kulturen der Welt attributed Tijuana as the "cradle of Mexican rock... where the music of the future is being born in Mexico."[116] According to Britain's Guardian Newspaper, "Tijuana is in the middle of an artistic flowering in which artists are re-examining the city's hybrid binational culture."[117] Tijuana has been gaining recognition as a culinary center for the Baja Med fusion cuisine.[118]

In the five years prior to 2004 Tijuana's visual arts were sought out by European exhibitions, and received notable focus from Germany. An international exhibition in Hamburg titled Unlikely Encounters in Urban Space portrayed the developed environment in Eastern Tijuana as well as in New Delhi, Mar de Plata, Milan, Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg.[119]

Cultural Enclaves edit

Additionally, the metropolitan area is home to many cultural enclaves from around the world not including American and Mexican enclaves they have of each other.

Enclave Name Neighborhood Community Represented Official Recognition or Dedicated District
European Ethnic Enclaves
Little Italy Little Italy, San Diego Italian Americans Yes, 1996
Zona Centro, Tijuana Trentino Italo-Mexicano No
Valle de Guadalupe, Ensenada No
Little Portugal CBD Avenida de Portugal, Roseville-Fleetridge, San Diego Portuguese Americans No
Olivenhain Olivenhain, Encinitas German Americans Yes, 1890s
Asian Ethnic Enclaves
Barrio Chino La Mesa, Tijuana Chinese Mexicans No
Little Saigon City Heights, San Diego Vietnamese Americans Yes, June 4, 2013
Cambodian Americans No
Convoy District (Convoy Pan Asian Cultural & Business Innovation District) Kearny Mesa, San Diego Asian Americans
  • Taiwanese (Northwest)
  • Chinese and Korean (Central)
  • Japanese (East)
  • Southeast Asian (South)
Yes, October 20, 2020
National City, California & Paradise Hills, San Diego Filipino Americans No
Manila Mesa Mira Mesa, San Diego No
Little India (Center) Black Mountain Road, Miramar, San Diego Indian Americans No
Linda Vista, San Diego Southeast Asian American No
Golden Hill, San Diego No
East Clairemont Mesa Thai Americans No
Chollas View, San Diego Laotian Americans No
Pacific Islander Ethnic Enclaves
Little Samoa Oceanside, California Samoan Americans No
Oceanside & Vista Pacific Islander Americans No
Mission Beach, San Diego No
Spring Valley, San Diego County, California No
Middle Eastern Ethnic Enclaves
Little Baghdad El Cajon, La Mesa, & Spring Valley, CA Iraqi Americans, Assyrian Americans, and Chaldean Americans No
La Jolla Eruv La Jolla Jewish Americans Documented
University City Eruv South University City, San Diego Documented
College Area Eruv College Area, San Diego Documented
San Carlos Eruv San Carlos, San Diego Pending
African, African American, and Afro-Caribbean Ethnic Enclaves
Little Moghadishu / Little Somalia City Heights, San Diego Somali Americans No
Sudanese Americans & South Sudanese Americans No
Pequeña Haití Cañon del Alacrán, Divina Providencia, Tijuana Haitian Mexicans No
Southeast San Diego African Americans No
Indigenous Ethnic Enclaves/Reservations
Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation Kumeyaay Yes, 1875
San Pasqual Band of Diegueno Mission Indians Yes, 1910
Jamul Indian Village Yes, 1912
Barona Group of Capitan Grande Band of Mission Indians Yes, 1932
Juntas de Neji Southern Tecate Municipality
San José de la Zorra San José de la Zorra, Baja California
Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians Payómkawichum (Luiseño) Yes, 1875
Pauma Band of Luiseno Mission Indians of the Pauma & Yuima Reservation, California Yes, 1893
Pala Band of Luiseno Mission Indians of the Pala Reservation Payómkawichum (Luiseño)

Kuupangaxwichem (Cupeño)

Yes, 1901
Hatam's Village (Hata'am) Balboa Park (San Diego) Native Californians & Native Baja Californians Dismantled 1900s
Other Latin American Ethnic Enclaves
El Barretal Matamoros Norte-Centro-Sur, Tijuana Hondurans & Guatemalans; Central American migrant caravans No
City Heights, San Diego Salvadoran Americans No
Escondido, California Mexican Americans & Central Americans No
El Cajon, California Puerto Ricans No
LGBTQ Enclaves
Hillcrest Gayborhood Hillcrest, San Diego LGBT Americans No
Zona Centro, Tijuana LGBT Mexicans No
Alpine, California Lesbian Americans No

Sports edit

 
Surfers in Cardiff

San Diego–Tijuana is an avid sports community. Popular sports include association football, American football, baseball, and, to a lesser extent, bloodless bullfighting. The region has professional teams involved in Major League Baseball and the Liga MX. In a sign of binational friendship, San Diegans – Team USA – and Tijuanenses – Team Mexico – engaged in a friendly game of border volleyball at Border Field State Park in which volleyballs were passed over the international border fence splitting the beach.[120] This was the first game of international border volleyball and garnered attention from tourists and the media.[120]

Watersports and boardsports also form a large part of San Diego–Tijuana sports culture. Sailing is a popular hobby in the San Diego Bay and Mission Bay areas. The San Diego–Ensenada International Yacht Race is hosted by the Southwestern Yacht Club of San Diego and takes place annually as over 100 contestants from Southern and Baja California race from San Diego Bay to Bahia de Todos Santos.[121] The region is known for its avid surf scene. Surfers take to the water in the beaches of North County and Rosarito; well-known destinations include Swami's, Cardiff-by-the-Sea, and Baja Malibu.[122][123][124]

In the mid-2000s, the Binational Organizing Committee (BiNOC) of San Diego–Tijuana made it known that the sister-cities were interested in making a bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics.[125] The proposed bid intentionally rivaled L.A.'s bid for the 2016 games.[125][126] However, the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC) decided against the binational bid and made it clear San Diego would not receive the opportunity to host the Summer Games in 2016.[127] Furthermore, USOC member Bob Ctvrtlik stated the International Olympic Committee has never been inclined to consider a dual-city Games.[127]

 
Petco Park
 
Estadio Caliente
Club Sport League Stadium
San Diego Padres Baseball Major League Baseball Petco Park
San Diego Sockers Indoor soccer Major Arena Soccer League Pechanga Arena
San Diego Loyal SC Association football USL Championship Torero Stadium
ASC San Diego Association football National Independent Soccer Association Canyon Crest Academy Stadium
Club Tijuana Association football Liga MX Estadio Caliente
Oceanside Surf Basketball American Basketball Association Hourglass Arena
Tijuana Zonkeys Basketball CIBACOPA Auditorio Fausto Gutierrez Moreno
Old Mission Beach Athletic Club RFC Rugby union Southern California Rugby Football Union The Little Q Rugby Field
Toros de Tijuana Baseball Mexican League Estadio Chevron
San Diego Gulls Ice hockey American Hockey League Pechanga Arena
San Diego Seals Lacrosse National Lacrosse League Pechanga Arena
San Diego Legion Rugby union Major League Rugby Snapdragon Stadium
San Diego Wave FC Women's soccer National Women's Soccer League Snapdragon Stadium
NCAA Division I College Sports

Further reading edit

  • Sparrow, Glen (2001). "San Diego-Tijuana: Not quite a binational city or region". GeoJournal. 54 (1): 73–83. doi:10.1023/A:1021144816403. JSTOR 41147639. S2CID 153015715.
  • Richardson, Harry W.; Bae, Chang-Hee C. (July 6, 2005). "Tijuana-San Diego: Globalization and the transborder metropolis". Globalization and Urban Development. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 181–195. doi:10.1007/3-540-28351-X_12. ISBN 978-3-540-22362-7.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • International Call Assistance
Organizations
  • San Diego Dialogue of UCSD
  • ULI San Diego/Tijuana District Council

diego, tijuana, 5421861, 0296194, 5421861, 0296194, transborder, agglomeration, californiasdowntown, diegola, jolla, shoresmission, diegotijuana, cultural, centeravenida, revolución, tijuana, archdowntown, tijuanaprimary, urban, area, countriesunited, states, . 32 32 31 87 N 117 01 46 63 W 32 5421861 N 117 0296194 W 32 5421861 117 0296194 San Diego TijuanaTransborder agglomeration of the CaliforniasDowntown San DiegoLa Jolla ShoresMission San DiegoTijuana Cultural CenterAvenida Revolucion and Tijuana ArchDowntown TijuanaPrimary urban area of San Diego TijuanaCountriesUnited States MexicoStateCalifornia Baja CaliforniaLargest city by population by areaTijuanaSan DiegoPrincipal citiesSan DiegoTijuanaArea Transborder agglomeration of the Californias6 194 sq mi 16 040 km2 Elevation0 6 533 ft 0 1 991 m Population 2012 est 2 Density1 020 sq mi 394 km2 Urban5 456 487 Metro4 922 723 1 Time zoneUTC 8 PST Summer DST UTC 7 PDT San Diego Tijuana is an international transborder agglomeration 3 straddling the border of the adjacent North American coastal cities of San Diego California United States and Tijuana Baja California Mexico The 2020 population of the region was 5 456 577 making it the largest bi national conurbation shared between the United States and Mexico and the second largest shared between the US and another country 1 The conurbation consists of the San Diego metropolitan area defined as all of San Diego County 2020 population 3 298 634 4 in the United States and the municipalities of Tijuana 2020 pop 1 922 523 Rosarito Beach 126 980 and Tecate 108 440 in Mexico It is the third most populous region in the California Baja California region smaller only than the metropolitan areas of Greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area The largest centers of the urban area maintain global city status 5 and as a whole the metropolitan region is host to 13 consulates from Asian European North American Oceanian and South American nations 6 7 Over fifty million people cross the border each year between Tijuana and San Diego giving the region the busiest land border crossing in the world 8 Since the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA in 1994 San Diego Tijuana has become a dominant commercial center in the United States and Mexico 9 The economic success of globalization has allowed San Diego Tijuana to grow to the third richest region in the former Californias region with a GDP of 136 3 billion in 2002 10 11 Renowned for natural beauty tourism is a leading industry in the region and its coastal environs have been paramount factors in the growth of action sports lifestyle companies Other key industries include military biotech and manufacturing San Diego Tijuana traces its European roots to 1542 when the land was explored by Portuguese explorers on behalf of imperial Spain In 1601 it was mandated by the Spanish viceroy in Mexico City that safe ports be found one of which would be San Diego Bay for returning Spanish trade ships from Manila to Acapulco 12 During this mission explorer Sebastian Vizcaino was also told to map the California coast in great detail leading to the further exploration of the modern day site of San Diego Tijuana 12 Since 2010 statewide droughts in California and in northern Mexico have further strained the San Diego Tijuana binational region s water security 13 Contents 1 History 2 Urban landscape 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Ecology 3 3 Flora and fauna 4 Geology 4 1 Major coastal water bodies 5 Populace 5 1 Cities 5 2 Mexico United States border 6 Economy 6 1 Maritime 6 2 Manufacturing 6 3 Tech 6 4 Major business districts 6 5 Tourism 6 6 Cross border Trade amp NAFTA 7 Transportation 7 1 Public transportation 7 2 Major highways 7 3 Port 7 4 Airports 7 5 Ports of Entry 8 Higher education 9 Communication 9 1 Telephone 9 2 Broadcasting 9 2 1 Television 9 2 2 Radio 10 Other infrastructure 10 1 Water 10 2 Energy 11 Culture 11 1 Border influence 11 2 Cuisine 11 2 1 Beverage 11 3 International recognition 11 3 1 Cultural Enclaves 11 4 Sports 12 Further reading 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory editThe Kumeyaay referred to as Diegueno by the Spanish are the original inhabitants of San Diego County and northern Baja California 14 The Kumeyaay lived in this region for over 10 000 years as hunter gatherers and horticulturists 14 The boundaries of the Kumeyaay lands once extended from the Pacific Ocean south to Ensenada Baja California east into the Imperial Valley and north to Warner Springs 14 The Payomkawichum or the Luiseno also had a presence in modern day North County San Diego Western exploration of the Californias dates back to the 16th century when in 1535 Hernan Cortes first visited the Baja California Peninsula in his search for Calafia 15 Subsequent exploration in 1542 by Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo brought the western explorers to what is now the California Baja California region Cabrillo first named San Diego San Miguel Initial expeditions by the west to the Californias were followed by pacification and conversion efforts by the Spanish Empire and the Catholic Church The first Catholic religious order to visit the region was the Jesuits in 1683 followed by the Franciscans in 1768 and the Dominicans in the 1770s 15 The California mission system is a reminder of the Pacific Coast s colonial era In 1769 Father Junipero Serra founded San Diego after occupying the Kumeyaay village of Kosa aay and created the first of the California missions Mission San Diego de Alcala 16 17 The Valley of Tijuana was explored the same year by Juan Crespi 18 In 1829 Santiago Arguello a Californio and a major Mexican land grant ranchos owner obtained ownership of a parcel of land known as Rancho Tia Juana and in 1889 was Tijuana officially founded on this parcel when descendants of Arguello and Agustin Olvera an early Los Angeles pioneer agreed to develop the city nbsp San Ysidro Border Inspection Station in 1922The metropolitan region was historically united as part of the province of Alta California under the Viceroyalty of New Spain In 1821 Mexico won its independence from the Spanish crown and kept the area under the jurisdiction of Alta California From the late 1860s Mission lands were granted as ranchos to Californio gentry These distributions of lands accelerated after the Missions were secularized in 1833 ending the dominance of the Missions in the economy San Diego Bay became a port of call for whalers and hide traders from the United States The region started depopulating as settlements in the region began to be raided between 1836 and 1842 by the Kumeyaay resistance with both Rancho Tia Juana 1839 and San Diego 1840 amp 1842 raided during that period In 1846 the Mexican American War began and the United States continued to expand its borders under the doctrine of Manifest Destiny As the war came to California the Battle of San Pasqual was fought in the northern areas of modern day San Diego In 1848 the war ended with the Fall of Mexico City and boundaries were redrawn which created a border between San Diego and Tijuana 3 miles 4 8 km south of San Diego Bay 1919 saw the implementation of Prohibition and the rapid growth of Tijuana tourism Americans flocked to the city which had become a major destination for the Hollywood elite which led to the construction of the Agua Caliente Tourist Complex which in turn spurred the rise of hotels and overall growth in the city 15 Urban landscape editSan Diego Tijuana urbanity stretches along the coastline from the northernmost city of Oceanside to the southernmost city of Rosarito Beach The urban area of San Diego Tijuana is the 72nd largest in the world and 11th largest in North America with a population of 5 330 000 The highest population densities are located in the San Diego neighborhoods of University City La Jolla Mission Valley Pacific Beach 19 the Downtown San Diego district of the East Village among others and areas of Tijuana An area of 116 census tracts in the North County region of the conurbation has a population of 615 092 and a per capita income of 44 131 which is about 50 percent more than that of California and the entire United States 20 This area contains nearly all of the area located in the cities of Carlsbad Encinitas Solana Beach and Del Mar A part of this region are the communities of Rancho Santa Fe Carmel Valley and La Jolla which have consistently been among the ranks of some of the richest neighborhoods in the United States 21 Outside of the urban centers older regions of San Diego County south of the San Diego River as well as La Jolla and Pacific Beach are built on a street grid Suburban growth north of the San Diego river were built as master planned suburban communities on top of mesas with the city of villages concept in mind built around car dependency Tijuana s suburban landscape is made up densely packed low density mixed land uses with patches of street grids east of the city and more organic growth influenced by topography Cities like Tecate and Rosarito are built on street grid systems nbsp The Downtown San Diego skyline seen at night At 2 1 miles 3 4 km long the Coronado Bay Bridge stands as the longest bridge in the region and Southern California nbsp Tijuana skyline from the Colonia La CachoGeography edit nbsp nbsp San Diego County and Rosarito Beach Tijuana and Tecate municipalities The metropolitan region is situated along the Pacific Coast on the border between the United States and Mexico 22 The region lies just south of Orange County and west of Imperial County and shares borders with Greater Los Angeles The area has a varied topography with over seventy miles of coastline and snow capped mountains that rise to the northeast in San Diego County The terrain includes flood plains canyons steep hills and mesas 23 The region has its eastern terminus in the Colorado Desert and Imperial Valley regions where another conurbation Mexicali Calexico is formed The urbanized area where San Diego and Tijuana meet is known as San Ysidro on the American side of the border and Colonia Federal Colonia Libertad on the Mexican side East from the coast ten miles 16 km the Tijuanense boroughs of Mesa de Otay and Centenario are heavy urbanized whereas the corresponding American area of Otay Mesa is composed of primarily dispersed industrial and distribution facilities At the Pacific Ocean region of the border the border is urbanized on the Mexican side while the adjacent American side is an the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve and thus not urbanized nbsp The Tijuana River National Estuarine Research ReserveAccording to the U S Census Bureau San Diego County has a total area of 4 526 square miles 11 720 km2 of that 4 200 square miles 11 000 km2 of it is land and 326 square miles 840 km2 of it 7 20 is water The area of Tijuana Municipality is 339 5 square miles 879 km2 the municipality includes part of the Coronado Islands located off the coast of the municipality in the Pacific Ocean This combined area with the additional areas of Tecate 1 188 8 square miles 3 079 km2 and Rosarito Beach 198 2 square miles 513 km2 place the area of San Diego Tijuana at 6 252 5 square miles 16 194 km2 San Diego is by far the most populated county though population density is much higher in the immediate border area adjacent to the south in Baja California than it is in San Diego County Urban growth is currently developing regions to the east of Tijuana Municipality and south of Rosarito Beach where developers are building many new residential communities while in San Diego it is observed to the northeast along the Interstate 15 corridor to Temecula and Murrieta Greater Ensenada is more frequently than not considered part of the region given its proximity and inter connectivity with the metropolitan area While it is ninety and seventy four miles 145 and 119 km from the cities of San Diego and Tijuana respectively recent developments between the port city and Rosarito Beach including upscale Americanized subdivisions and resorts such as Punta Azul Baja Mar and La Salina have greatly increased the urbanity of the corridor between Rosarito Beach and Ensenada Transportation infrastructure increasingly binds the region as the under construction Ensenada International Airport is expected to serve as the third major airport of the metropolitan region offering flights to Europe South America and East Asia 24 Climate edit nbsp June Gloom over the South CoastSan Diego Tijuana straddles a Mediterranean climate and Semi arid climate area 25 The Mediterranean climate is characterized by generally warm dry summers on the near coastal regions with a slight temperature increase westward and relatively cool mild wet winters this is the climate that dominates northern San Diego Tijuana In southern San Diego Tijuana the semi arid climate is observed though characteristics of the Dry Summer Subtropical Mediterranean climate are present with most of the annual precipitation falling in the winter 26 The Peninsular Ranges assist in containing moisture to the coastal areas and create a rain shadow to the east as they are west facing mountains 27 The climate of the area often varies significantly due to the abundance of microclimates characterizing the region San Diego Tijuana s topography bays coastal hills mountains canyons and gorges maintain their own climates while being relatively near to each other During the May gray and June gloom seasons a dense cloak of coastal clouds known as marine layer covers the coastal areas keeping the area cool and moist to up to 5 10 miles 8 0 16 1 km inland This coastal cloud cover is frequently observed reaching as far inland as Poway and in some cases San Diego Country Estates Yet once outside this cloud the weather in sharp contrast can be warm and sunny 28 In some cases June gloom lasts into July creating cloudy skies over the coastal regions for entire days 29 An example of the regional temperature fluctuations is shown in the varying averages of downtown San Diego averaging January lows of 50 F and August highs of 78 F El Cajon just 10 miles 16 km northeast of downtown San Diego averaging January lows of 42 F and August highs of 88 F Tijuana averaging January lows of 45 F and August highs of 78 F 29 30 31 The differences are even more observed in North County where coastal Oceanside maintains an average January low of 45 F and August highs of 73 F while inland Escondido maintains average January lows of 42 F and August highs of 89 F 32 San Diego Tijuana is also subject to El Nino weather events In extreme cases the overwhelming fall of rain creates mudslides and greatly increases the flow of urban rivers This sudden influx of water has the potential to flood populated places and drown out wetland habitat measures have been taken to reduce this potential negative affect while simultaneously restoring the rivers and their watersheds to a pristine and natural state 33 34 Ecology edit This regional climate supports a chaparral and woodlands ecoregion that is further divided in three sub regions where two are observed in San Diego Tijuana 35 These are the coastal sage and chaparral and montane chaparral and woodlands ecoregions In the montane region fire serves a unique purpose as a medium of change and while fire typically can threaten urban development it is essential for the historically annual cleanse of the woodlands and reproduction of pyrophytes Southern coastal sage scrub is further observed on the coast 36 This is an ecoregion with extremely high levels biodiversity where its endemic species are endangered by human encroachment 36 In this terrestrial ecoregion the coastal lowlands are within a semi semi arid Mediterranean climate inhabited by low growing aromatic and drought deciduous shrubs In the water the Intertidal estuary and kelp forest biomes dominate the aquatic world home to an equally diverse set of flora and fauna The cool nutrient rich waters of the north Pacific are able to provide kelp forests with millions of plankton the base of the aquatic food chain due to an upwelling of water from the deep sea in the stormy winter months nbsp Torrey Pines State Reserve home to Pinus torreyana torreyana the sole location worldwide of the subspecies Flora and fauna edit nbsp A leopard shark and two blacksmith chromis observed in kelp forest habitat at Birch AquariumTrees of San Diego Tijuana included chamise scrub oak manzanita live oak lodgepole pine black oak and closed cone pine forests Lowland shrubs included California sagebrush black sage white sage California buckwheat as well as cacti and succulents Terrestrial mammals included the mountain lion bobcat bighorn sheep mule deer as well as a variety of rodents and lagomorphs including the California ground squirrel San Diego kangaroo rat and brush rabbit Black bears jaguars and sea otters historically populated the area but their range has been restricted by human encroachment and the jaguar and the sea otter are now rarely if ever observed Aquatic mammals included the gray whale a seasonal migratory animal as well as the bottlenose dolphin great white shark killer whale and California sea lion and on rare occasion Guadalupe fur seal In recent times the region has seen the rebound of artiodactyls such as the Peninsular bighorn sheep a distinct population segment of the desert bighorn sheep 37 Reptiles include olive ridley sea turtle western fence lizard various rattlesnake species and species of blind snake and gopher snake Amphibians included the barred tiger salamander and California tree frog With a mostly arid climate reptile species outnumber amphibians by a margin of seven to one 38 Bird species popular to the region are the California quail California condor California least tern peregrine falcon and golden eagle Introduced parrot species such as the red crowned amazon parrot have also been found living and breeding in San Diego County and parts of Tijuana Metro 39 The waters off of the coast of San Diego Tijuana are densely populate by the denizens of the kelp forests Kelp forests are found to a great extent and are populated by Garibaldi leopard sharks gobies rockfish and sculpins Great white sharks have been observed in the waters off the coast while there are numerous documentations of their occurrence in the waters off Guadalupe Island 40 From the confines of the forests ocean going species such as the Ocean sunfish are observed Environmental research in climate and biodiversity is conducted at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and by the Biodiversity Research Center of the Californias of the San Diego Natural History Museum Geology edit nbsp Mountains and faults within and near San Diego Tijuana nbsp Cerro de Las Abejas The land on which San Diego Tijuana sits is due west of a major transform fault The transform fault known as the San Andreas Fault was created during the Cenozoic Era by the movements of the Pacific Plate and North American Plate The region experiences earthquakes and felt the shocks of the 2009 Gulf of California earthquake and 2010 Baja California earthquake 41 42 The main mountain ranges of the Peninsular Ranges ridging eastern San Diego Tijuana are the Palomar Mountains Laguna Mountains Sierra de Juarez and the peaks of the Cuyumacas including Cuyamaca Peak The highest points are located in the Lagunas at 6 378 feet 1 944 m and in the Cuyumacas at 6 512 feet 1 985 m while the highest is the peak of Hot Springs Mountain at 6 535 feet 1 992 m 43 44 These mountain ranges constitute part of the Salinian Block a largely granitic terrane dating back to the Mesozoic era and thus explaining the abundance of such stone throughout the region Once part of the North American Plate the Salinian block broke off due to the formation of the San Andreas Fault and rift resulting in the Gulf of California and its extension of the Salton Trough The faults nearest the urban area are the Elsinore and Laguna Salada faults both secondary to the San Andreas fault Major coastal water bodies edit The region is set with many natural coastal harbors estuaries inlets lagoons and bays These included the major water bodies known as Buena Vista Lagoon Agua Hedionda Lagoon Batiquitos Lagoon San Elijo Lagoon Mission Bay San Diego Bay Tijuana River EstuaryPopulace editHistorical population CensusPop Note 19903 245 397 20004 129 43327 2 20105 105 76923 6 historical data source 45 The populace of the San Diego Tijuana is cosmopolitan in that many cultures and ethnic groups are present A large transitory population exists due to Tijuana s border proximity to the United States This location draws many Latin Americans 46 including Argentines Cubans Guatemalans and Andean nationalities as well as Chinese Korean and Japanese people Italian French Spanish and Lebanese also reside in the region With a population of approximately five million people the San Diego Tijuana metropolitan area accounts for 40 of the United States Mexico border population 47 The metropolitan area experiences the largest rates of growth in an urban area that stretches from Los Angeles to Tijuana 47 An analysis of age groups in the region found a relatively older population lives on the San Diegan side of the border while a relatively younger population the Tijuana side 47 The Tijuana region also maintains a population largely composed of people born outside of Baja California 47 Cities edit nbsp Tijuana the largest city in the region nbsp San Diego from Balboa Park the second largest city in the region nbsp Chula Vista Bayfront of Chula Vista 3rd largest city in the region nbsp Oceanside Pier of Oceanside 4th largest city in the region San Diego amp TijuanaSan Diego is located at 32 42 N 117 09 W 32 700 N 117 150 W 32 700 117 150 just north of Tijuana The city is divided into eight districts by the municipal government of the City of San Diego in accordance with policing and community service areas 48 The city lies south of North County and west of East County while also being north of parts of South Bay Though the city boundaries grace Tijuana s Centre City lies approximately 18 miles 29 km north of Tijuana San Diego has deep canyons separating its mesas creating small pockets of natural parkland scattered throughout the city This makes San Diego a hilly city The Coronado and Point Loma peninsulas separate San Diego Bay from the ocean Tijuana is located at 32 31 N 117 01 W 32 517 N 117 017 W 32 517 117 017 just south of San Diego The city is divided into nine administrative boroughs which are in turn divided into neighborhoods These boroughs offer administrative services such as urban planning civil registry inspection verification public works and community development served by a delegate As Tijuana ranks higher in the Mexican urban hierarchy than San Diego does in the American urban hierarchy Tijuana contains many foreign consulates including those of China Korea Finland the United States Germany Spain Honduras France Austria Gambia the United Kingdom Italy Norway Sweden Israel Canada and the Czech Republic Tijuana does not receive competition from a larger urban center as San Diego does from Los Angeles However with Mexicali growing rapidly a possible canal project planned and Silicon Border development under way Tijuana will soon face similar competition Population figures for California cities are from 2010 U S Census data 49 Population figures for Baja California cities are from 2010 INEG census data 50 Major cities 100 000 inhabitantsTijuana 1 810 645 San Diego 1 386 932 Chula Vista 275 487 Oceanside 174 068 Escondido 151 038 Carlsbad 114 746 El Cajon 106 215 Other cities 40 000 inhabitantsVista 98 381 San Marcos 94 833 Rosarito Beach 90 022 Tecate 64 764 Encinitas 62 007 La Mesa 61 121 Santee 60 037 National City 56 173 Poway 48 481 Cities with under 40 000 inhabitantsEl Refugio 36 400 Santa Fe 34 234 Cuero de Venados 27 789 Lemon Grove 27 627 Imperial Beach 26 137 La Joya 22 126 Terrazas del Valle 20 421 Coronado 20 192 Villa del Campo 13 906 Solana Beach 12 941 Del Mar 4 161 Mexico United States border edit Main article Mexico United States border nbsp Beach at Border State Park San Diego is on the right while Tijuana is on the left nbsp Border fence between Tijuana right and San Diego s border patrol offices left nbsp Otay Mesa Port of Entry pedestrian facility nbsp US Mexico border crossing from the American side The international border between the United States and Mexico runs from San Diego Tijuana eastward towards the Gulf of Mexico The Pacific Ocean terminus of the border was defined as a line passing from the confluence of the Colorado and Gila rivers now the southeastern corner of the U S State of California to the Pacific Ocean such that it would pass one Spanish league south of the southern end of San Diego Bay This ensured that the United States received the natural harbor at San Diego There are three existing border crossings in San Diego Tijuana with two more planned San Ysidro El Chaparral is the busiest border crossing in the world 51 In 2019 alone more than 77 2 million people entered the U S through this port 52 There are maximum 30 vehicle border crossing lanes at the San Ysidro Port of Entry into the United States and 6 or 8 lanes into Mexico from San Ysidro 53 The San Diego Tijuana border is also a major point of entry for trafficking where 50 brothels of trafficked Mexican girls exist in San Diego County 54 The majority of cross border trips into the United States are those made by commuters into the Greater San Diego area and Southern California as a whole There is a thriving reverse traffic for entertainment in Tijuana and affordable goods and services The San Ysidro port of entry is the main border crossing for non commercial traffic Crossing times are notoriously slow at San Ysidro particularly for those entering the U S in cars 53 Given delays frequently experienced upon entry to Mexico many cross border travelers choose to cross on foot 53 Infrastructure on both sides of the border delivers travelers and commuters to border crossings via respective public transportation systems of which includes the San Diego Trolley blue line that runs from downtown San Diego to the border crossing Economy editLeading industries in San Diego Tijuana are trade services electronics tourism life sciences high tech and defense sectors 55 In 2002 San Diego and Tijuana had a gross regional product of 136 3 Billion 55 and in 2007 this figure increased to 176 Billion 56 The greater San Diego area has a knowledge based economy that is only growing Tijuana s sub metropolitan region is reliant on a diversified manufacturing sector 10 Leading private employers to the metropolitan region are Qualcomm SAIC Sempra Energy Sony Kyocera Pfizer Global Research amp Development Callaway Golf Sharp Healthcare Scripps Health Sanyo Hitachi Panasonic Corporation Samsung Hyundai Mattel Honeywell Pioneer Corporation Maxell Douglas Furniture and International Rectifier 55 On the 2020 Globalization and World Cities classification San Diego was rated as Beta level global city up from Gamma level while Tijuana was rated as a high sufficiency city Maritime edit The economy of the urban area is influenced by the Port of San Diego which gives the region a strong maritime sector the conurbation is the location of the only major submarine and shipbuilding yards on the West Coast and of the largest naval fleet in the world The cruise ship industry which is the second largest in the California Baja California region generates an estimated 2 million annually from the purchase of food fuel supplies and maintenance services 57 In California alone the port is the fastest growing port in terms of cruise ship dockings and the second largest behind the Port of Los Angeles 57 Manufacturing edit nbsp An industrial park in Tijuana s outskirtsManufacturing accounts for a large part of the regional economy more so observed in Tijuana 10 The focus of manufacturing in the region is on soft and hard technological products 58 In metropolitan Tijuana manufacturing has historically allotted for a large sector of the economy 59 and San Diego County s economy has increasingly focused on manufacturing which 2002 allotted for 25 billion of the county s economic income 60 The 2000s decade saw Tijuana overtake the Twin Cities as medical device manufacture capital of North America 61 The amount of diverse and numerous manufacture companies in the area have made the metropolitan region one of the world s largest concentrated manufacturing areas 58 Tech edit nbsp Qualcomm Corporate HeadquartersSan Diego Tijuana is ground zero for a transborder tech sector 62 Engineers and entrepreneurs in the entirety of the border region are fueling the growth of this economic industry in which a symbiotic relationship exists between think tanks in the north and manufacturing heads in the south that creates a healthy environment for startup companies 62 San Diego alone was rated by Forbes in 2014 as one of the best places to start a tech company 63 Several areas of San Diego are home to offices and research facilities for numerous biotechnology companies and pharmaceutical companies Among American metropolitan areas metropolitan San Diego is the third largest concentrated area of high technology and biotechnology businesses 60 The presence of University of California San Diego and other research institutions helped fuel biotechnology growth In June 2004 San Diego was ranked the top biotech cluster in the U S by the Milken Institute 64 San Diego is home to companies that develop wireless cellular technology Qualcomm Incorporated was founded and is headquartered in San Diego Qualcomm is the largest private sector technology employer excluding hospitals in San Diego County 65 Due to San Diego s military influence major national defense contractors such as General Atomics and Science Applications International Corporation SAIC are or have been headquartered in San Diego Major business districts edit Business districts include the Core Columbia district of Downtown San Diego the Rio Zone in Tijuana the Rancho Bernardo Carmel Valley Mission Valley Sorrento Mesa and University City neighborhoods of San Diego Notability among business districts extends to Rancho Bernardo the site of Sony US corporate headquarters 66 Business districts within San Diego Tijuana nbsp Centre City San Diego s central business district nbsp Rio Zone Tijuana s central business district nbsp Village of La Jolla the La Jolla business district nbsp University City a North County business district Tourism edit nbsp Kasatka Shamu performing at SeaWorld San Diego nbsp Pacific Beach a popular destination for beachgoers nbsp Tijuana s Cultural Center s OMNIMAX theater nbsp Avenida Revolucion one of Tijuana s prime entertainment districts Tourism is a major industry of the region owing much to the area s mild Mediterranean climate Tijuana alone is the most visited city in the Western Hemisphere second only to New York City 67 50 000 000 people visit the city each year and about 300 000 visitors cross by foot or car from the San Ysidro point of entry to Tijuana every day 67 Balboa Park the San Diego Zoo SeaWorld the San Diego Zoo Safari Park Legoland the city s beaches and golf tournaments hosted in the region such as the Farmers Insurance Open are just some of the major tourist destinations in the conurbation Mexico s drinking age of 18 and legal and regulated prostitution make Tijuana a common weekend destination for many young Southern Californians and sex tourists 68 Popular attractions in the region include Sesame Place San Diego Avenida Revolucion Balboa Park Belmont Park Birch Aquarium Cabrillo National Monument Christ of the Sacred Heart Statue Hotel del Coronado Legoland California Legoland Water Park San Diego Zoo San Diego Zoo Safari Park SeaWorld San Diego Tijuana Cultural Center Zona Norte nbsp Interior of a bar in TijuanaMany large luxury hotels line the San Diego Bay and coast at Playas de Tijuana The Bay and its marinas are surrounded by more than fifteen hotels while historic buildings such as the Hotel del Coronado and Rosarito Beach Hotel lie on the Coronado Peninsula and Rosarito coast In Playas Baja Mar and Baja Malibu several luxury hotels and condominiums can be found lining the coast in customary beach resort fashion including Park Towers and AQUA condominiums 69 Cross border Trade amp NAFTA edit The North American Free Trade Agreement has a great influence on transborder trade in the San Diego Tijuana economy Of all the goods exchanged to the north 20 transported are destined for San Diego 60 are destined for other California counties and the remaining 20 are destined to other American states 70 The metropolitan economy has become increasingly integrated as the NAFTA process has reduced trade and investment barriers which facilitates the trade and extensive sales services via cross border exchange 71 San Diego Tijuana is a critical commercial link to the United States 10 59 In Tijuana companies that have established assembly plants in industrial parks referred to as maquiladoras include Sony Toyota Samsung Kodak Matsushita Panasonic Nabisco Philips Pioneer Plantronics Pall Corporation Tara Labs and Sanyo while San Diego supports the expansion of its own industrial parks in Otay Mesa 59 Additionally some of these companies such as Samsung source the development of items locally 72 Even prior to the implementation of NAFTA Tijuana was home to many businesses selling products and services at a lower rate than in the United States Today businesses such as auto detailing medical services dentistry and plastic surgery are heavily marketed and located near Tijuana s border with San Diego In addition there are high tech firms and telemarketing companies including Medtronic Inc in the city 73 74 This influx of companies is drawing skilled people from the United States with technical trades and college degrees to Tijuana transforming the city economy into a knowledge based one Transportation editMain article Transportation in San Diego Tijuana Public transportation edit Further information Public transportation in San Diego County nbsp San Diego Trolley Blue Line heading towards TijuanaSan Diego s primary light rail network is the San Diego Trolley operated by Metropolitan Transit System The trolley system consist of four lines the Blue Line which runs from the San Ysidro Transit Center just north of the border to UTC Transit Center tzhe Orange Line which runs from Courthouse station to Santee Town Center the Green Line which runs 12th amp Imperial Transit Center to Santee Town Center through Mission Valley and the Silver Line which is a heritage streetcar line that runs in a loop in downtown San Diego San Diego is served by the Pacific Surfliner an Amtrak inter city rail which terminates at Santa Fe Depot in downtown San Diego San Diego is also served by the COASTER a commuter rail service that runs from downtown San Diego to Oceanside operated by North County Transit District From Oceanside Transit Center riders can either take the SPRINTER hybrid rail to Escondido Metrolink Orange County line to downtown Los Angeles or the Metrolink San Bernardino line to San Bernardino Plenty of free parking is available at Stadium station on days when Snapdragon Stadium is not hosting events as well as several other stations throughout the system that have park and rides All trolley stations also provide connection points to MTS bus services as MTS has designed the trolley to be the backbone of the local public transit system In Tijuana there is currently no public rail system although there is a system of buses that operate in the area However it was reported by the San Diego Union Tribune that San Diego officials desired that the California High Speed Rail be extended to Tijuana and South Bay in order to capitalize on the potential economic benefits 75 Additionally there have been plans to extend the Blue Line into Tijuana proper 76 Major highways edit nbsp Cabrillo Freeway SR 163 leading into Downtown San DiegoSan Diego Tijuana is at the junction of major interstates state routes and federal highways The region is at the terminus of ten major Interstates and Federal Highways Radiating to the east and south are connections to the Imperial Valley Mexicali Valley and the Arizona Sun Corridor via Interstate 8 the Inland Empire the Las Vegas Strip and metropolitan area and Salt Lake City via Interstate 15 77 and to the Greater Ensenada area via Federal Highway 1D To the north and west the area is connected to the Los Angeles metropolitan area Northern California and Cascadia via Interstate 5 Interstate 5 and Federal Highway 1 are critical highways for commercial and international trade due to their junction at the San Ysidro Port of Entry linking major industrial regions along the British Columbia Coast West Coast of the United States and the Gold Coast of Baja California at the busiest port of entry in the world 78 The metropolitan area is linked by Federal Highway 2 and State Route 111 to Gulf of Mexico cities 79 Within the metropolitan region there are many transportation routes via highway These included Interstate 805 connecting Tijuana to Del Mar 80 Many highways have a terminus in South Bay and run north and west towards other agglomerations such as the Inland Empire and Los Angeles metropolitan area 81 State Routes that link to these urban areas include State Route 79 and State Route 78 San Diego Tijuana is linked to Ensenada by various ways as well including Federal Highway 3 Federal Highway 1 and Federal Highway 1D running from the border cities of Tijuana and Tecate to the Cinderella of the Pacific 82 nbsp A Federal Highway in Tijuana s North nbsp Highway that connects Tijuana and Ensenada locally known as La Escenica In addition to the extensive highway system the cities and regions within San Diego Tijuana are interconnected by many state routes as well State Route 52 connects communities in northern San Diego State Route 905 connects the Otay Mesa Port of Entry with South Bay cities State Route 125 connects South Bay with East County State Route 94 connects South Bay with the Mountain Empire and State Route 78 connects North County Coastal with North County Inland as well as to the mountain communities of the San Diego County Peninsular Ranges San Diego has a major network of roads predominantly free Highways with several toll roads and Interstates Interstate 5 runs south from the Canadian border city of Vancouver and terminates at the San Ysidro International border where it becomes Federal Highway 1 Another major freeway is Interstate 8 that runs west from the Arizona Sun Corridor at Casa Grande Arizona and terminates at Ocean Beach in San Diego The roadway system in Tijuana is very low end compared to the quality of streets in the United States The majority of the roads are in desperate need of repair with many newly constructed off ramps being set up in an impractical method often requiring sharp and hard turns When it comes to long distance travel through Baja California many people use the toll roads that are well maintained and are at a standard comparable to that of U S roads Port edit nbsp San Diego is a port of call for nine cruise lines nbsp Dole Honduras at the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal container port San Diego Tijuana s only deepwater port is both a container port and cruise ship destination The Port of San Diego has recreation terminals and docked ships at the Maritime Museum of San Diego which is located at the Embarcadero The port is serviced by nine cruise lines including Carnival Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean International A new cruise terminal was recently constructed at the Port to compensate for the increased levels of maritime tourism Cargo and container terminals are located to the south of the Embarcadero where two marine cargo facilities are administered The Port of San Diego was ranked by the United States Bureau of Transportation Statistics as one of America s top 30 U S container ship ports in 2007 The Port also serves as the primary port of entry for larger car corporations including Honda Volkswagen and Nissan into the United States of America The nearby Port of Ensenada also serves as a transport point where cruise ships arrive and depart from Southern Californian European and Central American ports 83 Cargo arriving at the Port of Ensenada is also transported to the metropolitan region via the Tijuana Ensenada Freeway 84 The Port of Punta Colonet is being planned as an alternative port to the West Coast ports of the United States and Canada 85 though the port is not without its negative environmental impacts 86 150 miles 240 km south of Tijuana the port is intended to compete with the twin ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles 87 Once completed the port would serve as the primary dock for Asian vessels unloading shipping containers 87 and would have a 200 mile 320 km rail line to San Diego Tijuana Airports edit See also San Diego International Airport Tijuana International Airport and McClellan Palomar Airport nbsp Plane flying into San Diego International Airport nbsp Front of Tijuana International Airport San Diego Tijuana is served by of two major international airports the San Diego International Airport Lindbergh Field and Tijuana International Airport General Abelardo L Rodriguez and one regional airport McClellan Palomar Airport Carlsbad San Diego International Airport is located 3 mi 4 8 km northwest of Centre City and 20 mi 32 km from Tijuana Operated by the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority 88 the airport is the busiest single runway commercial airport in the world SAN served 22 009 921 in 2021 As of June 2023 San Diego International Airport is served by 16 passenger airlines 89 In 2022 the Tijuana International Airport served 12 324 600 passengers It is the fourth busiest airport in Mexico and serves as the focus city for Aeromexico Cross Border Xpress consists of a pedestrian toll bridge which directly links the terminal in Mexico with the CBX terminal on the U S side the only airport in the world with terminals on the territory of two countries McClellan Palomar Airport is located near the central business district of Carlsbad serving North County However the airport does not currently have any passenger service The top ten flights in 2022 to 2023 from all three airports were to Mexico City with 1 191 875 passengers Guadalajara with 1 068 321 passengers Las Vegas with 837 000 passengers Denver with 704 000 passengers San Jose with approximately 661 000 passengers Sacramento with 654 000 passengers Phoenix with 641 000 passengers San Francisco with 625 000 Seattle Tacoma with 610 000 passengers Dallas Fort Worth with 532 000 passengers 90 91 Ports of Entry edit San Ysidro Port of Entry nbsp nbsp Traffic at the San Ysidro Port of Entry the busiest international border crossing in the world In 2002 according to the San Diego Association of Governments SANDAG the number of trucks driving north through the Otay Mesa Port of Entry numbered over 725 710 representing approximately 20 billion worth of freight 70 Over time congestion has increased as the population of the region has grown at a high rate San Diego and Tijuana have both begun collaborative renovation plans in order to ease border congestion 92 The San Ysidro Land Port of Entry Expansion Project involves adding ten lanes to the San Ysidro border crossing and the creation of the El Chaparral Port of Entry 93 Another plan includes adding an extra border crossing to the east of Otay Mesa with completion estimated for the year 2015 94 Projects such as these will attempt to reduce the loss of millions of dollars per day due to waiting at the border 92 There are currently three ports of entry serving the metropolitan region The San Ysidro Port of Entry El Chaparral expansion projects and the opening of the new Otay Mesa East Port of Entry will add significant capacity The most trafficked port of entry is the San Ysidro Port of Entry the busiest international crossing in the world It serves as the primary entry point for the commuting populace of the metropolitan region The Cross Border Xpress pedestrian border crossing which opened December 9 2015 is for the exclusive use of ticketed passengers at Tijuana International Airport Further east the Otay Mesa Port of Entry deals with high volumes of commercial traffic as it is located in the manufacturing zone of the region The Otay Mesa Port accounts for billions of dollars worth of product 70 Further east the Otay Mesa East Port of Entry is planned And the farthest east the Tecate Port of Entry is the smallest port of entry and is not designed for dealing with large volumes of traffic as it follows a long winding road through the Mountain Empire Many businesses in South Bay offer Mexican car insurance on a short term prepaid basis Most large car rental companies in San Diego do permit their vehicles to be taken across the border but generally require a hefty fee sometimes costing more than the rental for Mexican auto insurance Visitors to the region should note that automobile insurance does not travel across the international border Vehicles registered in Mexico may also require separate insurance for use in the United States In California Automobile insurance is required by the State Higher education edit nbsp The Geisel Library at the University of California San Diego nbsp Hepner Hall at San Diego State University nbsp Entrance sign at the Autonomous University of Baja California nbsp Post graduate studies building at Centro de Ensenanza Tecnica y Superior CETYS The region is home to over twenty higher education schools including numerous universities private and state colleges and maintains an excellent educational infrastructure 95 Tijuana is home to high ranked national colleges and universities and San Diego is ninth most educated city in the United States 96 Notable schools included the Autonomous University of Baja California Tijuana campus Ibero American University Tijuana campus CETYS University Tijuana campus University of San Diego USD San Diego State University University of California San Diego UCSD California Western School of Law and Thomas Jefferson School of Law Of the colleges in San Diego Tijuana UCSD is the highest ranked college ranking as 14th best university in the world by the Academic Ranking of World Universities and in 2010 ranking as the top university in the United States by The Washington Monthly 97 Communication editTelephone edit Further information Telephone numbering in the Americas nbsp Area codes of the metropolitan areaTelephonic communication between the two cities requires international calling To call Tijuana from the United States 011 the US international call prefix must be dialed followed by Mexico s country calling code 52 to call San Diego from Mexico 00 the ITU prefix must be dialed followed by 1 the North American Numbering Plan calling code Then the caller will in both cases proceed to dial the area code and the local number San Diego County Area Codes 1 619 1 858 1 760 1 442Tijuana Metro Area Codes 52 665 52 664 52 661 Broadcasting edit Limited San Diego television channels are included in Mexican cable in Tijuana and Ensenada Broadcasting is shared between the two cities as necessary as is the case along both land U S borders Frequency coordination means that all broadcast stations must be approved by both countries before making any major changes In this case approval is required by the Federal Communications Commission FCC in the U S and Federal Telecommunications Institute in Mexico Additionally the FCC requires a permit to supply programming to a foreign broadcaster for transmission back into the U S Television edit Cooperative frequency coordination between both city regions is quite common an example is XETV TV 6 a Tijuana based television station used to target audiences in San Diego until its US based studio closure in 2017 where the K being replaced by the X as an indicator that it is a Mexican licensed station These stations were not required to shut down their NTSC analog TV operations in June 2009 as full powered FCC licensed stations must In 2007 a bill in the U S Congress called the DTV Border Fix Act was introduced which would have allowed all stations in San Diego and all television stations within 80 kilometers 50 mi of the Mexican border to keep their analog signals active for another five years delaying the television transition that the rest of the United States would be going through while the bill passed the Senate it did not pass the House 98 Prior to the 2017 rules change by the FCC San Diego was the largest media market in the United States that was legally unable to support a duopoly between two full power television stations under the 1999 order duopolies were not allowed in any U S market with fewer than nine full power stations and once a duopoly is formed there must be eight unique station owners that remain in a single market The California side of the market does not fall under either requirement as there are only seven full power stations in that part of the San Diego Tijuana metropolitan area Though two sister stations existed the E W Scripps Company group of KGTV and KZSD LD and the NBC Owned Television Stations group of KNSD and KUAN LD they are not considered duopolies under the FCC s legal definition as common ownership between full power and low power television stations in the same market is permitted regardless to the number of stations licensed to the area On November 20 2017 the FCC eliminated the Eight Voices Test requirement allowing media companies to form duopolies regardless of the number of full powered stations licensed to each market 99 The decision allowed Nexstar Media Group owner of Fox affiliate KSWB TV to purchase independent station KUSI TV from McKinnon Broadcasting on May 8 2023 100 the transaction was completed on August 31 creating the first legal duopoly in San Diego 101 The Mexico licensed stations in the market are not subject to the duopoly rules as two or more full power television stations are allowed to be owned by the same company under Mexican telecommunications law American based TelevisaUnivision owns three stations in Tijuana XETV TV XHUAA TV and XEWT TV while Entravision Communications and TV Azteca each own two stations XHAS TV and XHDTV TV and XHJK TV and XHTIT TV respectively Radio edit On radio relaying programming across the border is even more common with stations like XHITZ FM 90 3 and XHMORE FM 98 9 being programmed by U S broadcast groups while being owned by Mexican companies as required under Mexican law and operating under Mexican broadcast law Other American stations relayed via Mexico through local marketing agreements LMAs are XEPE AM 1700 XEPRS AM 1090 and simulcast XHPRS FM 105 7 XESPN AM 800 XESURF AM 540 XETRA FM 91 1 XHRM FM 92 5 XEWW AM 690 XHA FM 94 5 XHFG FM 107 3 XHGLX FM 91 7 XHLNC FM 104 9 and XHTY FM 99 7 All of these stations are authorized to simulcast digitally in HD Radio as are other stations within 320 kilometers 200 mi of the U S border 102 Because many stations in the reserved band FM below 92 MHz are used by Mexican stations other specific allotments are reserved for non commercial educational NCE radio stations in the San Diego area However the lack of such allotments still leaves the area with no college radio stations available except via Internet radio cable radio LPAM and TV SAP These are KCR from San Diego State University and KSDT from University of California San Diego Under Mexican law radio stations located in Mexico must broadcast the Mexican National Anthem twice daily and broadcast public affairs program La Hora Nacional on Sunday evenings Other infrastructure edit nbsp Sempra Corporate Headquarters in San DiegoThe metropolitan region has developed many utilities which have primary focus on energy and environmental health A focal point of cross border environmental relations is the care of the Tijuana River Estuary The International Boundary Wastewater Treatment Plant IWTP was developed by the International Boundary and Water Commission IBWC as a joint project between the US and Mexico in the mid 1990s following substantial environmental studies regarding the polluting effects of the river system from run off and untreated water on the Tijuana side of the border region 103 The facility now treats sewage flows exceeding the capacity of the present Tijuana sewage treatment system 104 The plant directly assists in the restoration of the Tijuana River Valley 104 Another collaborative effort between the two cities was the environmentally friendly development of paved roads created by placing concrete blocks on dirt roads in the San Bernardo neighborhood of northwestern Tijuana 105 Whilst being a good example for overall development of Tijuana it served to retain water in the earth and prevented possible negative impacts from floodwater Water edit San Diego Tijuana relies heavily on water from the Colorado River 70 Approximately half of San Diego Tijuana s fresh water is used for non drinking purposes including landscape irrigation commercial enterprise and industrial processing 70 Methods such as saltwater desalination provides options for obtaining fresh water Cities in the metropolitan region such as Carlsbad have begun desalination projects of their own without a bi national conference The Carlsbad desalination plant is the largest desalination plant in the United States It was opened in December 2015 and produces 50 million gallons a day enough water to supply 10 of San Diego region residents with drinking water 106 Energy edit The policies shared between San Diego and Tijuana are addressed in a binational way as the effects of actions on one side of the border with regard to infrastructure are felt on the neighboring side 107 In the past decade San Diego Tijuana has developed new cooperative strategies to make energy consumption more efficient and effectively supply energy 108 In 2000 Sempra Energy constructed a natural gas pipeline to provide energy to a thermal power plant in Rosarito also the principle plant in Baja California 108 109 The region was able to reduce levels of air pollution substantially when the conversion to a natural gas fired electrical generation facility was completed 108 109 In the Baja California subregions unleaded gasoline has also replaced leaded fuel as means for transportation helping regional air quality 108 The new strategies also included plans that worked with the nearby capital of Mexicali where the pipeline shared between the two states was constructed to supply natural gas to its metropolitan area with energy supplied by Sempra and Proxima 108 Sempra Energy has been applauded for its initial development of this cross border infrastructure 110 On April 19 2011 it was reported by the San Diego Union Tribune that San Diego Gas and Electric signed a twenty year deal with Sempra Generation to obtain power generated by the Energia Sierra Juarez Project a wind farm of 450 wind turbines taking up an area predominantly in the Tecate region of Baja California larger than Anza Borrego Desert State Park 111 Energia Sierra Juarez is slated for construction in 2012 though the deal has yet to be approved by the California Public Utilities Commission 111 Culture editSee also Culture of San Diego and Culture of Tijuana nbsp San Diego Museum of Man nbsp Tijuana s House of Culture The sister cities of the metropolitan region have a complex and rich cultural exchange The binational art communities are the most progressive yet least funded when compared to other international communities 112 The cultural activities present on both sides of the border provide artists a benefited cultural activity sector Art organizations on both sides of the border have binational programs Mainly Mozart Festival Binacional de Mozart performs for both cities of California and Baja California with internationally known musicians and orchestras 112 In San Diego the Opera s Ensemble tours the metropolitan region every year performing over 150 performances in the regions educational institutions cultural centers and concert venues 112 Additionally the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego actively promotes the binational arts culture in the area and has displayed exhibitions highlighting the border experience 112 The metropolitan region has become a magnet for artists from abroad Musicians and visual artists from Russia Mexico and Eastern Europe are now found in organizations such as the Orchestra of Baja California 112 The cultural region is the home of many museums and landmarks The regions cultural institutions and landmarks are in part comprised by the many institutions of Balboa Park Tijuana Cultural Center the Maritime Museum of San Diego a collection of large historic American vessels Cabrillo National Monument Christ of the Sacred Heart Mission San Diego de Alcala Mission San Luis Rey de Francia Old Town San Diego State Historic Park and museum at San Pasqual Battlefield State Historic Park Local beach culture is in part represented by the California Surf Museum Border influence edit nbsp The Caesar salad finds roots in the cross border culture of 1920s American Prohibition when San Diegans would take trips to Tijuana to legally consume alcohol Caesar salad was invented by an Italian immigrant living in San Diego who owned a popular restaurant for drinking in Tijuana Today young San Diegans under 21 still cross into Tijuana for the 18 years old drinking age In a region where Mexican traditional culture and American contemporary culture clash native artists benefit from the manifested diverse cultural influences 112 Tijuana s adjacent location to San Diego fuels its intrigue for artists and art curators 112 A growing number of artists and musicians have begun challenging the sometimes negative stereotype of Tijuana through exhibitions displaying the city as a place of contingency and creativity 112 San Diego Tijuana has been considered one of the hottest interfaces between first and third worlds 113 Artists attraction to San Diego Tijuana s arts and culture scene was accredited by the Tucson Weekly to the environment created by one of the richest and most developed cities San Diego border proximity to a once third world type city Tijuana 114 Cuisine edit Food in the region has been greatly attributed from its position on the US Mexican border The region has also been influenced by immigrants who migrated to the area Notable foods rooted in the region are Fish Tacos Tacos de Pescado Regional San Diego burritos California burrito Carne Asada burrito Carne Asada Fries Caesar Salad invented in Tijuana Beverage edit The region is also home to many wineries and craft breweries scattered throughout the region with San Diego s craft brewery industry Tijuana s proximity to the wineries in Valle de Guadalupe and Tecate s Cerveza Tecate owned by Cuauhtemoc Moctezuma Brewery Tijuana and Tecate s growth could be attributed to the influx of American alcohol tourism in the 1920s to evade the US prohibition of alcohol International recognition edit The culture of San Diego Tijuana is international and cosmopolitan reflecting the values of each city Tijuana s emerging vibrant culture scene plays and undeniable role in the art enrichment of its neighborhoods 112 The metropolitan regions southern anchor city Tijuana was identified by Newsweek International as one of the top eight creative cities in the world 112 It was recognized for its amalgamation of traditional Mexican Norteno music by cities as far away as Tokyo and Berlin 115 Berlin s Haus der Kulturen der Welt attributed Tijuana as the cradle of Mexican rock where the music of the future is being born in Mexico 116 According to Britain s Guardian Newspaper Tijuana is in the middle of an artistic flowering in which artists are re examining the city s hybrid binational culture 117 Tijuana has been gaining recognition as a culinary center for the Baja Med fusion cuisine 118 In the five years prior to 2004 Tijuana s visual arts were sought out by European exhibitions and received notable focus from Germany An international exhibition in Hamburg titled Unlikely Encounters in Urban Space portrayed the developed environment in Eastern Tijuana as well as in New Delhi Mar de Plata Milan Berlin Munich and Hamburg 119 Cultural Enclaves edit Additionally the metropolitan area is home to many cultural enclaves from around the world not including American and Mexican enclaves they have of each other Enclave Name Neighborhood Community Represented Official Recognition or Dedicated DistrictEuropean Ethnic EnclavesLittle Italy Little Italy San Diego Italian Americans Yes 1996Zona Centro Tijuana Trentino Italo Mexicano NoValle de Guadalupe Ensenada NoLittle Portugal CBD Avenida de Portugal Roseville Fleetridge San Diego Portuguese Americans NoOlivenhain Olivenhain Encinitas German Americans Yes 1890sAsian Ethnic EnclavesBarrio Chino La Mesa Tijuana Chinese Mexicans NoLittle Saigon City Heights San Diego Vietnamese Americans Yes June 4 2013Cambodian Americans NoConvoy District Convoy Pan Asian Cultural amp Business Innovation District Kearny Mesa San Diego Asian Americans Taiwanese Northwest Chinese and Korean Central Japanese East Southeast Asian South Yes October 20 2020National City California amp Paradise Hills San Diego Filipino Americans NoManila Mesa Mira Mesa San Diego NoLittle India Center Black Mountain Road Miramar San Diego Indian Americans NoLinda Vista San Diego Southeast Asian American NoGolden Hill San Diego NoEast Clairemont Mesa Thai Americans NoChollas View San Diego Laotian Americans NoPacific Islander Ethnic EnclavesLittle Samoa Oceanside California Samoan Americans NoOceanside amp Vista Pacific Islander Americans NoMission Beach San Diego NoSpring Valley San Diego County California NoMiddle Eastern Ethnic EnclavesLittle Baghdad El Cajon La Mesa amp Spring Valley CA Iraqi Americans Assyrian Americans and Chaldean Americans NoLa Jolla Eruv La Jolla Jewish Americans DocumentedUniversity City Eruv South University City San Diego DocumentedCollege Area Eruv College Area San Diego DocumentedSan Carlos Eruv San Carlos San Diego PendingAfrican African American and Afro Caribbean Ethnic EnclavesLittle Moghadishu Little Somalia City Heights San Diego Somali Americans NoSudanese Americans amp South Sudanese Americans NoPequena Haiti Canon del Alacran Divina Providencia Tijuana Haitian Mexicans NoSoutheast San Diego African Americans NoIndigenous Ethnic Enclaves ReservationsSycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation Kumeyaay Yes 1875San Pasqual Band of Diegueno Mission Indians Yes 1910Jamul Indian Village Yes 1912Barona Group of Capitan Grande Band of Mission Indians Yes 1932Juntas de Neji Southern Tecate MunicipalitySan Jose de la Zorra San Jose de la Zorra Baja CaliforniaRincon Band of Luiseno Indians Payomkawichum Luiseno Yes 1875Pauma Band of Luiseno Mission Indians of the Pauma amp Yuima Reservation California Yes 1893Pala Band of Luiseno Mission Indians of the Pala Reservation Payomkawichum Luiseno Kuupangaxwichem Cupeno Yes 1901Hatam s Village Hata am Balboa Park San Diego Native Californians amp Native Baja Californians Dismantled 1900sOther Latin American Ethnic EnclavesEl Barretal Matamoros Norte Centro Sur Tijuana Hondurans amp Guatemalans Central American migrant caravans NoCity Heights San Diego Salvadoran Americans NoEscondido California Mexican Americans amp Central Americans NoEl Cajon California Puerto Ricans NoLGBTQ EnclavesHillcrest Gayborhood Hillcrest San Diego LGBT Americans NoZona Centro Tijuana LGBT Mexicans NoAlpine California Lesbian Americans NoSports edit See also Sports in San Diego and Sports in Tijuana nbsp Surfers in CardiffSan Diego Tijuana is an avid sports community Popular sports include association football American football baseball and to a lesser extent bloodless bullfighting The region has professional teams involved in Major League Baseball and the Liga MX In a sign of binational friendship San Diegans Team USA and Tijuanenses Team Mexico engaged in a friendly game of border volleyball at Border Field State Park in which volleyballs were passed over the international border fence splitting the beach 120 This was the first game of international border volleyball and garnered attention from tourists and the media 120 Watersports and boardsports also form a large part of San Diego Tijuana sports culture Sailing is a popular hobby in the San Diego Bay and Mission Bay areas The San Diego Ensenada International Yacht Race is hosted by the Southwestern Yacht Club of San Diego and takes place annually as over 100 contestants from Southern and Baja California race from San Diego Bay to Bahia de Todos Santos 121 The region is known for its avid surf scene Surfers take to the water in the beaches of North County and Rosarito well known destinations include Swami s Cardiff by the Sea and Baja Malibu 122 123 124 In the mid 2000s the Binational Organizing Committee BiNOC of San Diego Tijuana made it known that the sister cities were interested in making a bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics 125 The proposed bid intentionally rivaled L A s bid for the 2016 games 125 126 However the U S Olympic Committee USOC decided against the binational bid and made it clear San Diego would not receive the opportunity to host the Summer Games in 2016 127 Furthermore USOC member Bob Ctvrtlik stated the International Olympic Committee has never been inclined to consider a dual city Games 127 nbsp Petco Park nbsp Estadio Caliente Club Sport League StadiumSan Diego Padres Baseball Major League Baseball Petco ParkSan Diego Sockers Indoor soccer Major Arena Soccer League Pechanga ArenaSan Diego Loyal SC Association football USL Championship Torero StadiumASC San Diego Association football National Independent Soccer Association Canyon Crest Academy StadiumClub Tijuana Association football Liga MX Estadio CalienteOceanside Surf Basketball American Basketball Association Hourglass ArenaTijuana Zonkeys Basketball CIBACOPA Auditorio Fausto Gutierrez MorenoOld Mission Beach Athletic Club RFC Rugby union Southern California Rugby Football Union The Little Q Rugby FieldToros de Tijuana Baseball Mexican League Estadio ChevronSan Diego Gulls Ice hockey American Hockey League Pechanga ArenaSan Diego Seals Lacrosse National Lacrosse League Pechanga ArenaSan Diego Legion Rugby union Major League Rugby Snapdragon StadiumSan Diego Wave FC Women s soccer National Women s Soccer League Snapdragon StadiumNCAA Division I College SportsSan Diego Toreros FCS San Diego State Aztecs FBS Further reading editSparrow Glen 2001 San Diego Tijuana Not quite a binational city or region GeoJournal 54 1 73 83 doi 10 1023 A 1021144816403 JSTOR 41147639 S2CID 153015715 Richardson Harry W Bae Chang Hee C July 6 2005 Tijuana San Diego Globalization and the transborder metropolis Globalization and Urban Development Springer Science amp Business Media pp 181 195 doi 10 1007 3 540 28351 X 12 ISBN 978 3 540 22362 7 See also edit nbsp California portal nbsp Mexico portalCalifornia megapolitan areas List of California urban areas List of metropolitan areas in the AmericasReferences edit a b America metropolitan areas World Gazetteer 2011 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved February 19 2012 World Gazetteer San Diego Tijuana World Gazetteer Archived from the original on October 1 2007 Retrieved March 20 2011 California Coast Los Angeles to San Diego Bay NASA December 15 2008 Quick Facts San Diego County California census gov Retrieved November 4 2021 GaWC The World According to GaWC Retrieved February 26 2011 Foreign Embassies and Consulates in the United States GoAbroad com Retrieved August 14 2011 Foreign Embassies and Consulates in Mexico GoAbroad com Retrieved August 14 2011 Massive traffic cripples Tijuana border crossing Reuters April 19 2007 Retrieved June 11 2011 City of San Diego Partnering with Mexico City of San Diego Archived from the original on November 6 2010 Retrieved March 28 2011 a b c d San Diego Tijuana Manufacturing in the Information Age PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 22 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 San Diego and Tijuana At a Glance International Community Foundation Archived from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved March 28 2011 a b Bass Stephen Basques in the Americas From 1492 to 1850 A Chronology PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 28 2011 Retrieved April 3 2011 Rainfall Totals March Rain Not Enough to Pull from Drought Expert Says www nbcsandiego com Retrieved May 1 2022 a b c Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians Viejasbandofkumeyaay org Archived from the original on December 1 2012 Retrieved January 6 2013 a b c Tijuana San Diego Border Facts PDF Crossborder Business Associates Archived from the original PDF on March 17 2012 Retrieved July 8 2011 Mission History MissionSanDiego com Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved October 21 2011 San Diego History San Diego History Center Retrieved October 21 2011 Border Studies Series Institute for the Regional Studies of the Californias 1995 ISBN 9780925613134 Retrieved April 13 2017 Population Density Maps San Diego County Library April 22 2013 Retrieved August 23 2014 U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Tables B01003 and B19025 U S Census website Retrieved October 26 2013 The 27 Richest Neighborhoods in Southern California Business Insider Retrieved August 23 2014 Perspective view with Landsat overlay San Diego Calif NASA Retrieved March 20 2011 Introduction Overview of the County Trails Program PDF County of San Diego Archived from the original PDF on April 2 2012 Retrieved October 27 2011 USTDA grants US 630 000 to support airport development in Baja California Business News Americas February 27 2009 Retrieved June 1 2012 Peel M C Finlayson B L McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification PDF Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 4 2 439 473 doi 10 5194 hessd 4 439 2007 Greater San Diego Tijuana Binational Metropolitan Region International Competition for Sustainable Urban Design PDF Des Plaines IL Gas Technology Institute February 28 2003 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2011 Retrieved May 7 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help UPLIFT OF PENINSULAR RANGES AFFECTS TERRESTRIAL CLIMATE RECORD OF ENHANCED TROPICAL MOISTURE IN LATE PLIOCENE ANZA BORREGO DESERT CALIFORNIA The Geological Society of America GSA Retrieved March 20 2011 UCSD Meteora ucsd edu May 14 2010 Retrieved July 1 2010 a b Monthly Averages for San Diego CA The Weather Channel Retrieved April 22 2009 Monthly Averages for El Cajon CA The Weather Channel Retrieved April 22 2009 SERVICIO METEOROLoGICO NACIONAL NORMALES CLIMATOLoGICAS 1971 2000 Mexican National Meteorological Service Archived from the original on September 6 2010 Retrieved June 26 2010 Oceanside historic weather averages Intellicast Retrieved February 17 2010 Flood control begins in the Tijuana River Valley San Diego News Network Retrieved March 20 2011 Urban Rivers in Tecate and Tijuana Strategies for Sustainable Cities PDF San Diego Institute for Regional Studies of the Californias 2000 Retrieved May 7 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help California Chaparral and Woodlands 121 World Wildlife Fund Retrieved March 5 2011 a b California coastal sage and chaparral Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved March 20 2011 Lee Mike July 5 2011 Bighorn sheep numbers climb in Anza Borrego San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved July 7 2011 Biodiversity Amphibian and Reptile Atlas of Peninsular California San Diego Natural History Museum Retrieved March 8 2018 Wild Parrots of San Diego Retrieved March 5 2011 Great White Sharks in spotlight of Guadalupe Island Los Angeles Times October 29 2008 Retrieved April 28 2011 Grad Shelby August 3 2009 6 9 quake in Baja California rattles office workers in San Diego Los Angeles Times M7 2 Baja California Mexico United States Geological Survey April 4 2010 Retrieved April 4 2010 Hot Springs NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce Retrieved September 6 2009 Hot Springs Mountain California Peakbagger com Retrieved February 5 2010 World Gazetteer San Diego Tijuana World Gazetteer Archived from the original on October 1 2007 your University A report from the University of California president for friends and advocates of UC PDF University of California March 2008 Retrieved August 18 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d K Alper Donald Chadwick Day John amp Loucky James 2008 Transboundary policy challenges in the Pacific border regions of North America Calgary Alberta University of Calgary Press Neighborhood Maps City of San Diego The City of San Diego Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved July 6 2011 U S Census Bureau American FactFinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on March 11 2015 2010 INEG Population and Housing Census Retrieved May 1 2011 Traffic at theworld s busiest border crossing comes to a stop Archived from the original on September 5 2008 Retrieved April 2 2011 2019 California Baja California Border Crossing and Trade Highlights PDF SANDAG Retrieved October 8 2021 2019 represents the most recent year that the US Mexico Border was fully open for traffic a b c Border Wait Times U S Customs and Border Protection Retrieved March 22 2011 Ugarte Dr Marisa B Zarate Dr Laura Farley Dr Melissa October 15 2008 Prostitution and Trafficking of Women and Children from Mexico to the United States Journal of Trauma Practice 2 3 4 147 165 doi 10 1300 J189v02n03 08 S2CID 154085105 a b c San Diego and Tijuana At a Glance International Community Foundation Archived from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved March 20 2011 Global Cities of the Future McKinsey Quarterly Retrieved April 14 2011 a b Connie Lewis Cruise Ships Face Stiffer Anti Pollution Policies ProQuest 226952656 The Port of San Diego is s fastest growing port in terms of cruise ship dockings and the second largest behind the Port of Los Angeles The dockings are estimated to have an economic impact of more than 2 million on the local economy from the purchase of food supplies and fuel as well as maintenance services a b The Links Between San Diego Tijuana And Its Neighbors to the North Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation June 2000 Retrieved July 7 2011 a b c Tijuana Industrial Profile TeamNAFTA com Retrieved April 20 2011 a b San Diego Economy Major Industries and Commercial Activity City Data Advameg Inc Retrieved July 7 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Analysis by Crossborder Group Finds Tijuana 1 City in North America for Medical Device Manufacturing Employment Tijuana Economic Development Corporation July 19 2011 Retrieved August 14 2011 a b Kilpatrick Kate August 1 2014 Tech companies thriving in San Diego Tijuana border zone Al Jazeera America LLC Retrieved August 23 2014 Post Tom March 13 2014 The Best Places To Launch A Startup In 2014 Forbes Retrieved August 23 2014 MilkenInstitute org America s Biotech and Life Science Clusters San Diego s Position and Economic Contributions Retrieved December 10 2006 SD Daily Transcript Largest employers in San Diego County Retrieved May 20 2006 Sony History Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Tijuana River Pollution Video Sea Grant Coastal Science Serving California Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved March 17 2011 Leco Mike Tijuana USA Travel and Tourism Guide Tourist Attractions Destinations USATourist com Retrieved May 7 2011 Baja Malibu welcome at Rosarito Inn Rosarito Inn Retrieved May 4 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e CHAPTER IV PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE URBAN amp REGIONAL PLANNING IN THE SAN DIEGO TIJUANA REGION PDF International Community Foundation Retrieved March 20 2011 Quality of Life in the Greater San Diego Tijuana Tecate Playas de Rosarito Region PDF Institute for Regional Studies of the Californias Retrieved August 10 2011 news SAMSUNG Samsung Retrieved April 20 2011 Moves To Baja Profit Tech Firms PDF Los Angeles Times Archived from the original PDF on July 22 2011 Retrieved April 20 2011 Baja California Resurgence Halcyon Business Publications January 29 2009 Retrieved May 7 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help California High Speed Rail Blog December 8 2008 Retrieved March 20 2011 https www 10news com aaron dickens October 11 2022 Plan for trolley connecting San Diego to Tijuana moves forward ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV Retrieved June 23 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code last code help CS1 maint numeric names authors list link San Diego Tijuana Southwest Freeway Routes Google Maps Retrieved March 25 2011 Busiest border crossing Interstate Guide Retrieved March 25 2011 San Diego Mexicali Interstate Connection Google Maps Retrieved March 25 2011 Interstate 805 Google Maps Retrieved March 25 2011 Regional Highways Google Maps Retrieved March 25 2011 Federal Highways to Ensenada Google Maps Retrieved March 25 2011 Location Climate and Access Invest in Ensenada Ensenada EDC Ensenada Development Corporation Archived from the original on September 16 2011 Retrieved July 16 2011 Port of Ensenada Distance Port Authority of Ensenada Archived from the original on August 25 2011 Retrieved July 16 2011 Update Punta Colonet Port and Riviera Maya Airport Plans BanderasNews Retrieved April 20 2011 Overview Protect Punta Colonet Protect Punta Colonet Retrieved April 20 2011 a b New Port in Mexico Baja port could rival L A s Los Angeles Times March 25 2008 Retrieved April 20 2011 FAA San Diego County Regional Airport Authority Retrieved March 25 2011 Airlines serving San Diego International Airport San Diego County Regional Airport Authority 2023 Retrieved June 23 2023 San Diego CA San Diego International SAN Civil Agencia Federal de Aviacion Estadisticas gob mx in Spanish Retrieved June 23 2023 a b Modernization expansion for the San Ysidro border crossing gets under way February 25 2011 Retrieved March 19 2011 San Ysidro Land Port of Entry Expansion Project Overview U S General Services Administration Retrieved May 9 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hearing set on new border crossing east of Otay San Diego Union Tribune January 10 2011 Retrieved March 19 2011 Blurred Borders Trans Boundary Impacts amp Solutions in the San Diego Tijuana Border Region PDF International Community Foundation Retrieved April 2 2011 Christie Les August 31 2006 America s smartest cities CNNMoney com Retrieved April 22 2009 Washington Monthly 2009 National University Rankings Washington Monthly 2009 Archived from the original on January 21 2010 Retrieved October 8 2009 OpenCongress org Bill S 2507 2007 DTV Border Fix Act of 2007 FCC Modernizes Broadcast Ownership Rules www fcc gov November 20 2017 Retrieved September 5 2023 Nexstar Buying Independent KUSI San Diego For 35 Million TVNewsCheck May 8 2023 Retrieved May 8 2023 Notification of Consummation Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission September 1 2023 Retrieved September 1 2023 Mexico OK s HD Radio For Stations Near U S Border Radio Ink Magazine Archived from the original on February 5 2009 Retrieved August 25 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help C Michael Hogan Marc Papineau et al 1985 Preliminary Assessment of Environmental Effects of Sewage on San Diego Beaches EIS Prepared by Earth Metrics Inc for the U S EPA Region IX a b International Wastewater Treatment Plant United States Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved April 20 2011 Dotinga Randy February 6 2008 San Diego aims to fix a pollution problem by helping a Tijuana slum The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved June 12 2011 City of Carlsbad Seawater Desalination City of Carlsbad Retrieved April 20 2011 Binational Energy Planning Center for Sustainable Energy California Archived from the original on November 23 2010 Retrieved March 20 2011 a b c d e Energy issues in the San Diego Tijuana Region Center for Energy Studies San Diego State University Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved March 20 2011 a b Sempra Energy Environment Sempra Energy Archived from the original on January 10 2011 Retrieved April 20 2011 Press Release Sempra Energy Honored in Mexico City For Developing Cross Border Infrastructure Archived from 7CSempra Energy the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved April 20 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help a b SDG amp E buying power from Mexican wind farm San Diego Union Tribune April 19 2011 Retrieved April 21 2011 a b c d e f g h i j Blurred Borders San Diego Tijuana Arts amp Culture PDF International Community Foundation Retrieved April 4 2011 Haus der Kulturen der Welt September 2002 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Fjellestad Hans September 19 2002 New documentary exposes different layers of the border metropolis Tucson Weekly Piore Adam September 2 2002 How to Build a Creative City Newsweek International Tijuana Techno with folk roots Haus der Kulturen der Welt September 2002 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Park Fiction Forget Paris and London Newcastle is a creative city to match Kabul and Tijuana Guardian Newspaper Manchester UK September 2 2002 How did Tijuana become Mexico s go to foodie city October 25 2017 Unlikely Encounters in Urban Space International Congress Exhibition Hamburg Germany a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Bearman Joshuah July 26 2006 Viva Border Volleyball No changing sides allowed LA Weekly LP Retrieved June 21 2011 2010 San Diego Ensenada International Yacht Race Meet Up Archived from the original on October 18 2012 Retrieved June 20 2011 Swami s Beach a Favorite Location for Surfing in Encinitas San Diego County BeachCalifornia com Retrieved July 9 2011 Cardiff by the Sea Cardiff 101 Mainstreet Retrieved July 9 2011 Baja Malibu BajaSurfBreaks BAJASURFBREAKS COM Retrieved July 9 2011 a b Zeigler Mark September 8 2005 L A has a regional rival in its bid for 2016 Games The San Diego Union Tribune GB Staff September 8 2005 San Diego Tijuana Bid Could Rival L A 2016 Games Bids Inc Archived from the original on January 4 2012 Retrieved June 20 2011 a b GB Staff June 24 2006 The Answer is No To Joint San Diego Tijuana 2016 Olympic Bid Games Bids Inc Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved June 20 2011 External links editSan Diego Tijuana at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity International Call AssistanceOrganizationsSan Diego Dialogue of UCSD ULI San Diego Tijuana District Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Diego Tijuana amp oldid 1203165949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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