Mexico City megalopolis

Megalopolis of Central Mexico
Corona regional del centro de México
Skyline of Mexico City
Skyline of Mexico City
The Mexico City Megalopolis
The Mexico City Megalopolis
Country Mexico
Largest cityMexico City
Area
 • Metro
19,554 km2 (7,550 sq mi)
Population
 • Metro
32,408,889
 • Metro density1,700/km2 (4,300/sq mi)
GDP
 • Metro~US$400 billion

The Mexico City megalopolis, also known as the Megalopolis of Central Mexico (Spanish: Corona regional del centro de México), is a megalopolis containing Greater Mexico City and surrounding metropolitan areas.[3]

In 1996, the Programa General de Desarollo Urbano del Distrito Federal first proposed the concept of a "Megalopolis of Central Mexico", which was later expanded by PROAIRE, a metropolitan commission on the environment.[4]

The Megalopolis of Central Mexico (pre-2019 definition) includes 10 metropolitan areas of Mexico, as defined by the National Population Council (CONAPO): Valley of Mexico, Puebla, Toluca, Queretaro, Cuernavaca, Pachuca, TlaxcalaApizaco, Cuautla, Tulancingo, Tula and Tianguistenco.[5] Some of these areas form complex subregional rings themselves (i.e. Puebla forming a regional ring with Atlixco, San Martín Texmelucan, Tlaxcala and Apizaco).

The megalopolis (pre-2019 definition) spreads over 19,500 square kilometres (7,500 sq mi), and consists of 185 subdivisions in 6 federative entities: 169 municipalities, 81 in the State of Mexico, 39 in Tlaxcala, 19 in Puebla, 16 in Hidalgo, and 14 in Morelos; plus the 16 boroughs of Mexico City.[4] Its population as of 2020 is 30.8 million people, about 25% of the country's total.

Since 2019 the megalopolis (as defined by the Environmental Commission for the Megalopolis, CAMe) includes the state of Querétaro.[6][7] The Querétaro metropolitan area is also part of the fast-growing macroregion of Bajío.[8]

Component metropolitan areas[edit]

Rank Metropolitan Area Federative Entity Munic. Area (km2) 2020 Census[1] 2010 Census[9] Change
1 Valley of Mexico Mexico City, State of Mexico, Hidalgo 76 7,866.1 21,804,515 20,116,842 +8.39%
4 Puebla Puebla, Tlaxcala 39 2,392.4 3,199,530 2,728,790 +17.25%
5 Toluca State of Mexico 16 2,410.5 2,353,924 2,014,091 +16.87%
8 Querétaro Querétaro 5 2,427.3 1,594,212 1,161,458 +37.26%
16 Cuernavaca Morelos 8 1,189.9 1,028,589 924,964 +11.20%
32 Pachuca Hidalgo 7 1,184.8 665,929 512,196 +30.01%
33 TlaxcalaApizaco Tlaxcala 19 708.1 570,308 499,567 +14.16%
38 Cuautla Morelos 6 979.6 483,455 434,147 +11.36%
56 Tulancingo Hidalgo 3 673.1 268,351 239,579 +12.01%
59 Tula Hidalgo 5 1,845.8 256,795 205,812 +24.77%
67 Tianguistenco State of Mexico 6 304.0 183,281 157,944 +16.04%
Mexico City megalopolis 185 19,554.3 32,408,889 28,995,390 +11.77%

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020 - SCITEL" (in Spanish). Retrieved Jan 26, 2021.
  2. ^ Citibanamex (June 13, 2023). "Indicadores Regionales de Actividad Económica 2023" (PDF) (in Spanish). Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  3. ^ The Transition to a Predominantly Urban World and its Underpinnings, p.14
  4. ^ a b Área metropolitana del Valle de México PROAIRE
  5. ^ "Delimitation of Mexico's Metropolitan Areas 2015" (in Spanish). CONAPO. Retrieved December 29, 2020.
  6. ^ "Querétaro ya será parte de la megalópolis ('Querétaro will now be part of the megalopolis')". Diario de Querétaro. October 25, 2019. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  7. ^ Comisión Ambiental de la Megalópolis (September 2018). "La megalópolis de la ZMVM (The Greater Mexico City Megalopolis)". Gobierno de Mexico (Government of Mexico) (in Spanish). Comisión Ambiental de la Megalópolis. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  8. ^ "Megalópolis del centro del país", Effeta, June 2014
  9. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2010 - Consulta" (in Spanish). INEGI. Retrieved Dec 11, 2020.