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Springfield metropolitan area, Missouri

The Springfield, Missouri, metropolitan area, as defined by the United States Census Bureau, is an area consisting of five counties in southwestern Missouri, anchored by the city of Springfield, the state's third largest city.[1] Other primary population centers in the metro area include Nixa, Ozark, Republic, Bolivar, Marshfield and Willard. Currently, the city limits of Springfield reach the Nixa, and Ozark city limits at the Christian County line on US 160, and US 65 respectively, the city limits of Republic at James River Freeway on the southwest side of the city, and the Strafford city limits on Route 744 on the northeast side of the city.

Springfield metropolitan area, Missouri
Springfield, Missouri Metropolitan Statistical Area
Downtown Springfield viewed from Jordan Valley Park
CountryUnited States
State(s)Missouri
Largest citySpringfield
Other citiesBattlefield
Nixa
Ozark
Republic
Marshfield
Bolivar
Willard
Area
 • Total3,021 sq mi (7,820 km2)
Population
 (2020 census)
 • Total475,432
 • Rank117th in the U.S.
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1960126,274
1970152,92921.1%
1980207,70435.8%
1990240,59315.8%
2000368,37453.1%
2010436,71218.6%
2020475,4328.9%
[1]

As of the 2020 census, the MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Area) had a population of 475,432 and was the fastest growing metro area in the state of Missouri.[2] The area is home to several centers for higher education, including Missouri State University, Drury University and Southwest Baptist University. The Springfield region serves as the headquarters for various companies and organizations, including Bass Pro Shops, BKD, LLP, O'Reilly Auto Parts, Jack Henry & Associates, Andy's Frozen Custard and CoxHealth, and also serves as an important location for JPMorgan Chase,[3] Expedia and American Airlines.[4] As of 2019, the Springfield metro had a GDP of US$20.8 billion, the third largest in Missouri.[5]

Counties edit

Springfield Metropolitan Statistical Area
County 2020 Census 2010 Census Change
Greene County 298,915 275,174 +8.63%
Christian County 88,842 77,422 +14.75%
Webster County 39,085 36,202 +7.96%
Polk County 31,519 31,137 +1.23%
Dallas County 17,071 16,777 +1.75%
Total 475,432 436,712 +8.87%

Communities edit

Anchor cities edit

Places with 5,000 to 20,000 inhabitants edit

Places with 1,000 to 5,000 inhabitants edit

Places with 500 to 1,000 inhabitants edit

Places with less than 500 inhabitants edit

Unincorporated places edit

 
Satellite view of Springfield

School systems edit

  • Ash Grove R-IV School District
  • Billings R-IV School District
  • Bolivar R-1 School District
  • Chadwick School District
  • Clever R-V School District
  • Dallas Co. R-1 School District
  • Fair Grove R-10 School District
  • Fordland R-III School District
  • Greenwood Laboratory School
  • Hickory County R-1 School District
  • Logan-Rogersville R-VIII School District
  • Marion C Early R-V (Morrisville) School District
  • Marshfield R-I School District
  • Niangua R-V School District
  • Nixa R-II School District
  • Ozark R-VI School District
  • Pleasant Hope R-VI School District
  • Republic R-III School District
  • Seymour R-II School District
  • Spokane R-VII School District
  • Springfield Catholic Schools
  • Springfield R-12 School District
  • Strafford R-VI School District
  • Walnut Grove R-V School District
  • Willard R-2 School District

Economy edit

Springfield is the headquarters for O'Reilly Auto Parts, the only Fortune 500 company based in the region.[6] It also houses the headquarters for Bass Pro Shops, CoxHealth, Andy's Frozen Custard, BKD, LLP and Jack Henry & Associates. The Springfield–Branson National Airport serves as a base for American Airlines and Envoy Air as the airline utilizes the airport as a maintenance base.[7] Springfield is also an important region for call centers, with Expedia, Chase and AT&T maintaining call centers in the city.[8]

Media edit

Springfield serves as the center of the Springfield media market, the 75th largest media market in the country ranked amongst Omaha, Nebraska and Rochester, New York.[9] There are nearly 430,000 television owning homes and a total population of 1,065,000 people.[10]

Print edit

The main newspaper for the area is the Springfield News-Leader. The area is also served by the Springfield Business Journal and 417 magazine as well as its specialized magazines including 417 Biz.

Surrounding areas are served by their own newspapers as well, Christian County communities are served by Headliner News,[11] Marshfield by The Marshfield Mail,[12] and Bolivar by the Herald Free-Press.[13]

Broadcast edit

Television stations in the Springfield metro area include:

Education edit

Secondary edit

 
Central High School in Springfield

Springfield Public Schools is the largest fully accredited school district in the State of Missouri with nearly 25,000 students and a graduation rate of roughly 88%.[14] Nixa Public Schools, located just south of Springfield, is a growing district of 6,000 students that frequently ranks above the national average in ACT scores and has for the last ten years earned the highest state recognition for academic achievement given in Missouri.[15] Other growing districts in the area are located in the cities of Ozark, Republic, Strafford, and Marshfield. Private schools in the area include the Greenwood Laboratory School in Springfield, located on the Missouri State campus, and the Summit Preparatory School, located near James River Freeway in Chesterfield Village.

 
Meyer Library at Missouri State University Campus

There are also several private religious schools in the area, including Springfield Catholic and Springfield Lutheran.[16]

Colleges and universities edit

Missouri State University in Springfield is the second largest university in the state with roughly 23,697 in 2019. Other universities in Springfield include Drury University, a private liberal arts college with more than 1,000 students, and OTC with approximately 11,000 students, where students can earn a one-year certificate or a two-year associate degree.

Transportation edit

Principal Highways edit

Air edit

 
Allegiant Air flight departing from Springfield

The area is served by Springfield-Branson National Airport which has direct flights on Delta, United, American and Allegiant to thirteen cities across the United States, including hubs such as Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta, Charlotte and Houston, among others. With over one million passengers per year prior to the COVID-19 pandemic,[17] it is one of the fastest growing airports of its size in the country.[18] A new terminal was opened at the airport in 2007 with 10 gates, expandable to 60, and runways can accommodate the Boeing 747 and large military aircraft.

Springfield has a secondary, smaller airport, Downtown Airport which is not served by any passenger airlines and is used mostly by smaller general aviation airplanes.

Public transportation edit

Public transportation in the metropolitan area is focused primarily in Springfield. City Utilities of Springfield operates Springfield Transit Services, operating many buses on several different routes throughout the city, and bus service is available 365 days per year with less frequent weekend, holiday and evening routes.

Greenways edit

The area has a growing number of Greenway trails, 70 miles (112 km) run through parks and green areas, while 81 miles (130 km) are located on city streets.[19] Such routes include The Link, which runs on local roads through the city of Springfield, and the Trail of Tears Link, while the Frisco Link connects Springfield with Bolivar to the north.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "OMB Bulletin No. 18-04: Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses" (PDF). United States Office of Management and Budget. September 14, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  2. ^ Riley, Claudette. "Springfield is fastest-growing metro area in Missouri — even outpacing Kansas City — according to a report". Springfield News-Leader. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  3. ^ "Chase plans 300 more hires on 20th anniversary in Springfield". Springfield Business Journal. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  4. ^ "$11M airport project to expand American operations". Springfield Business Journal. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  5. ^ "Metropolitan Gross Domestic Product Data Series | Missouri Economic Research and Information Center". meric.mo.gov. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  6. ^ "O'Reilly Auto climbs 46 spots on Fortune 500". Springfield Business Journal. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  7. ^ Taylor, Abbey (14 December 2021). "Springfield-Branson National Airport opens new maintenance hangar for Envoy Air". ky3.com. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  8. ^ Partnership (SREP), Springfield Regional Economic. "Call Centers & Back Office". Springfield Regional Economic Partnership. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
  9. ^ "Springfield DMA Map 2021". Media Market Map. 2021-09-28. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  10. ^ "TRUCK ADS | Springfield Designated Market Map | ADMAP | Truckside Ads". www.truckads.com. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  11. ^ "Christian County Headliner News". ccheadliner.com. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  12. ^ "Marshfield Mail". marshfieldmail.com. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  13. ^ "Bolivar Herald Free-Press". bolivarmonews.com. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  14. ^ http://www.springfieldpublicschoolsmo.org/pages/SPSMO/DistrictInfo/Quality_Improvement___Accounta/QIA_Links/Demographic_Data
  15. ^ "Nixa Area Chamber". www.nixachamber.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  16. ^ Departika, Creativore. "Live in Springfield Missouri - Private K-12". www.liveinspringfieldmo.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  17. ^ Simmons, Linda (Dec 6, 2018). "Springfield-Branson National Airport tops 1 million passengers for 2018". Retrieved Dec 9, 2021.
  18. ^ News, reporter Emily Wood and videographer Tim Leimkuhler, KY3 (25 May 2017). "Springfield - Branson National Airport likely will reach 1 million passengers in 2017". ky3.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ "Ozark Greenways, Inc. - American Trails". www.americantrails.org. Retrieved 2021-12-09.

springfield, metropolitan, area, missouri, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, temp. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Springfield metropolitan area Missouri news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Springfield Missouri metropolitan area as defined by the United States Census Bureau is an area consisting of five counties in southwestern Missouri anchored by the city of Springfield the state s third largest city 1 Other primary population centers in the metro area include Nixa Ozark Republic Bolivar Marshfield and Willard Currently the city limits of Springfield reach the Nixa and Ozark city limits at the Christian County line on US 160 and US 65 respectively the city limits of Republic at James River Freeway on the southwest side of the city and the Strafford city limits on Route 744 on the northeast side of the city Springfield metropolitan area MissouriMetropolitan statistical areaSpringfield Missouri Metropolitan Statistical AreaDowntown Springfield viewed from Jordan Valley ParkCountryUnited StatesState s MissouriLargest citySpringfieldOther citiesBattlefieldNixaOzarkRepublicMarshfieldBolivarWillardArea Total3 021 sq mi 7 820 km2 Population 2020 census Total475 432 Rank117th in the U S Historical population CensusPop Note 1960126 274 1970152 92921 1 1980207 70435 8 1990240 59315 8 2000368 37453 1 2010436 71218 6 2020475 4328 9 1 As of the 2020 census the MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area had a population of 475 432 and was the fastest growing metro area in the state of Missouri 2 The area is home to several centers for higher education including Missouri State University Drury University and Southwest Baptist University The Springfield region serves as the headquarters for various companies and organizations including Bass Pro Shops BKD LLP O Reilly Auto Parts Jack Henry amp Associates Andy s Frozen Custard and CoxHealth and also serves as an important location for JPMorgan Chase 3 Expedia and American Airlines 4 As of 2019 the Springfield metro had a GDP of US 20 8 billion the third largest in Missouri 5 Contents 1 Counties 2 Communities 2 1 Anchor cities 2 2 Places with 5 000 to 20 000 inhabitants 2 3 Places with 1 000 to 5 000 inhabitants 2 4 Places with 500 to 1 000 inhabitants 2 5 Places with less than 500 inhabitants 2 6 Unincorporated places 3 School systems 4 Economy 5 Media 5 1 Print 5 2 Broadcast 6 Education 6 1 Secondary 6 2 Colleges and universities 7 Transportation 7 1 Principal Highways 7 2 Air 7 3 Public transportation 7 4 Greenways 8 See also 9 ReferencesCounties editSpringfield Metropolitan Statistical Area County 2020 Census 2010 Census ChangeGreene County 298 915 275 174 8 63 Christian County 88 842 77 422 14 75 Webster County 39 085 36 202 7 96 Polk County 31 519 31 137 1 23 Dallas County 17 071 16 777 1 75 Total 475 432 436 712 8 87 Communities editAnchor cities edit Springfield Pop 169 176 Nixa Pop 23 257 Ozark Pop 21 284Places with 5 000 to 20 000 inhabitants edit Republic Pop 18 750 Bolivar Pop 11 067 Marshfield Pop 7 458 Willard Pop 6 344 Battlefield Pop 5 990Places with 1 000 to 5 000 inhabitants edit Rogersville Pop 3 374 Buffalo Pop 3 040 Clever pop 2 517 Strafford Pop 2 361 Seymour Pop 1 967 Sparta Pop 1 792 Merriam Woods Pop 1 742 Fair Grove Pop 1 582 Ash Grove Pop 1 512 Crane Pop 1 410 Shell Knob partial census designated place Pop 1 379 Kissee Mills census designated place Pop 1 109 Billings Pop 1 083 Humansville Pop 1 036 Places with 500 to 1 000 inhabitants edit Highlandville Pop 915 Reeds Spring Pop 886 Rockaway Beach Pop 857 Fremont Hills Pop 847 Fordland Pop 801 Walnut Grove Pop 723 Pleasant Hope Pop 614 Bull Creek Pop 590 Indian Point Pop 520Places with less than 500 inhabitants edit Fair Play Pop 475 Galena Pop 422 Urbana Pop 411 Niangua Pop 403 Taneyville Pop 398 Morrisville Pop 381 Diggins Pop 295 Saddlebrooke Pop 230 McCord Bend Pop 283 Kirbyville Pop 204 Spokane census designated place Pop 177 Hurley Pop 173 Halfway Pop 173 Blue Eye Pop 160 Flemington Pop 148 Louisburg Pop 122 Aldrich Pop 80 Coney Island Pop 73 Goodnight Pop 18 Unincorporated places edit Boaz Bois D Arc Brighton Bruner Celt Chadwick Charity Chestnutridge Dunnegan Ebenezer Elkhead Elkland Eudora Garrison Glidewell Goodson Keltner Linden Logan Long Lane Northview Oak Grove Heights Oldfield Plano Polk Red Top Red Top Spokane Tin Town Tunas Turners Windyville Bradleyville Brownbranch Cape Fair Carr Lane Cedar Creek Crossroads Elsey Hilda Lampe McClurg Point Lookout Ponce de Leon Powersite Protem Reeds Spring Junction Ridgedale Rueter Table Rock Union City Viola partial Walnut Shade nbsp Satellite view of SpringfieldSchool systems editAsh Grove R IV School District Billings R IV School District Bolivar R 1 School District Chadwick School District Clever R V School District Dallas Co R 1 School District Fair Grove R 10 School District Fordland R III School District Greenwood Laboratory School Hickory County R 1 School District Logan Rogersville R VIII School District Marion C Early R V Morrisville School District Marshfield R I School District Niangua R V School District Nixa R II School District Ozark R VI School District Pleasant Hope R VI School District Republic R III School District Seymour R II School District Spokane R VII School District Springfield Catholic Schools Springfield R 12 School District Strafford R VI School District Walnut Grove R V School District Willard R 2 School DistrictEconomy editSpringfield is the headquarters for O Reilly Auto Parts the only Fortune 500 company based in the region 6 It also houses the headquarters for Bass Pro Shops CoxHealth Andy s Frozen Custard BKD LLP and Jack Henry amp Associates The Springfield Branson National Airport serves as a base for American Airlines and Envoy Air as the airline utilizes the airport as a maintenance base 7 Springfield is also an important region for call centers with Expedia Chase and AT amp T maintaining call centers in the city 8 Media editSpringfield serves as the center of the Springfield media market the 75th largest media market in the country ranked amongst Omaha Nebraska and Rochester New York 9 There are nearly 430 000 television owning homes and a total population of 1 065 000 people 10 Print edit The main newspaper for the area is the Springfield News Leader The area is also served by the Springfield Business Journal and 417 magazine as well as its specialized magazines including 417 Biz Surrounding areas are served by their own newspapers as well Christian County communities are served by Headliner News 11 Marshfield by The Marshfield Mail 12 and Bolivar by the Herald Free Press 13 Broadcast edit Television stations in the Springfield metro area include KYTV channel 3 NBC KOLR channel 10 CBS KYCW channel 15 The CW KOZK channel 21 PBS KOZL channel 27 MyNetworkTV KSPR channel 33 ABC KRBK channel 49 FoxEducation editSecondary edit nbsp Central High School in SpringfieldSpringfield Public Schools is the largest fully accredited school district in the State of Missouri with nearly 25 000 students and a graduation rate of roughly 88 14 Nixa Public Schools located just south of Springfield is a growing district of 6 000 students that frequently ranks above the national average in ACT scores and has for the last ten years earned the highest state recognition for academic achievement given in Missouri 15 Other growing districts in the area are located in the cities of Ozark Republic Strafford and Marshfield Private schools in the area include the Greenwood Laboratory School in Springfield located on the Missouri State campus and the Summit Preparatory School located near James River Freeway in Chesterfield Village nbsp Meyer Library at Missouri State University CampusThere are also several private religious schools in the area including Springfield Catholic and Springfield Lutheran 16 Colleges and universities edit Missouri State University in Springfield is the second largest university in the state with roughly 23 697 in 2019 Other universities in Springfield include Drury University a private liberal arts college with more than 1 000 students and OTC with approximately 11 000 students where students can earn a one year certificate or a two year associate degree Transportation editPrincipal Highways edit nbsp I 44 East to St Louis and west to Tulsa nbsp US 60 East to Louisville and west to Monett nbsp US 65 South to Little Rock and north to Des Moines nbsp US 160 West to Wichita nbsp Route 13 North to Kansas City nbsp Route 14 Between Nixa and Ozark nbsp Route 125 Between Strafford and RogersvilleAir edit nbsp Allegiant Air flight departing from SpringfieldThe area is served by Springfield Branson National Airport which has direct flights on Delta United American and Allegiant to thirteen cities across the United States including hubs such as Chicago Dallas Atlanta Charlotte and Houston among others With over one million passengers per year prior to the COVID 19 pandemic 17 it is one of the fastest growing airports of its size in the country 18 A new terminal was opened at the airport in 2007 with 10 gates expandable to 60 and runways can accommodate the Boeing 747 and large military aircraft Springfield has a secondary smaller airport Downtown Airport which is not served by any passenger airlines and is used mostly by smaller general aviation airplanes Public transportation edit Public transportation in the metropolitan area is focused primarily in Springfield City Utilities of Springfield operates Springfield Transit Services operating many buses on several different routes throughout the city and bus service is available 365 days per year with less frequent weekend holiday and evening routes Greenways edit The area has a growing number of Greenway trails 70 miles 112 km run through parks and green areas while 81 miles 130 km are located on city streets 19 Such routes include The Link which runs on local roads through the city of Springfield and the Trail of Tears Link while the Frisco Link connects Springfield with Bolivar to the north See also editList of metropolitan areas of MissouriReferences edit OMB Bulletin No 18 04 Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses PDF United States Office of Management and Budget September 14 2018 Retrieved March 3 2019 Riley Claudette Springfield is fastest growing metro area in Missouri even outpacing Kansas City according to a report Springfield News Leader Retrieved 2021 12 09 Chase plans 300 more hires on 20th anniversary in Springfield Springfield Business Journal Retrieved 2021 12 09 11M airport project to expand American operations Springfield Business Journal Retrieved 2021 12 09 Metropolitan Gross Domestic Product Data Series Missouri Economic Research and Information Center meric mo gov Retrieved 2021 12 09 O Reilly Auto climbs 46 spots on Fortune 500 Springfield Business Journal Retrieved 2021 12 30 Taylor Abbey 14 December 2021 Springfield Branson National Airport opens new maintenance hangar for Envoy Air ky3 com Retrieved 2021 12 30 Partnership SREP Springfield Regional Economic Call Centers amp Back Office Springfield Regional Economic Partnership Retrieved 2021 12 30 Springfield DMA Map 2021 Media Market Map 2021 09 28 Retrieved 2021 12 14 TRUCK ADS Springfield Designated Market Map ADMAP Truckside Ads www truckads com Retrieved 2021 12 14 Christian County Headliner News ccheadliner com Retrieved 2021 12 14 Marshfield Mail marshfieldmail com Retrieved 2021 12 14 Bolivar Herald Free Press bolivarmonews com Retrieved 2021 12 14 http www springfieldpublicschoolsmo org pages SPSMO DistrictInfo Quality Improvement Accounta QIA Links Demographic Data Nixa Area Chamber www nixachamber com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Departika Creativore Live in Springfield Missouri Private K 12 www liveinspringfieldmo com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Simmons Linda Dec 6 2018 Springfield Branson National Airport tops 1 million passengers for 2018 Retrieved Dec 9 2021 News reporter Emily Wood and videographer Tim Leimkuhler KY3 25 May 2017 Springfield Branson National Airport likely will reach 1 million passengers in 2017 ky3 com Retrieved 8 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Ozark Greenways Inc American Trails www americantrails org Retrieved 2021 12 09 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Springfield metropolitan area Missouri amp oldid 1177468288 Metropolitan Statistical Area, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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