Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area

Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area
Location of the Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area
Satellite image of the core of the Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area

The Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area is a United States Census Bureau defined Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) in the State of Colorado that includes the City and County of Denver and nine suburban counties. The Census Bureau estimates that the population was 2,357,404 on 2007-07-01, an +14.23% increase since United States Census 2000.[1] In 2007, 50.7% of Coloradans lived in the Denver-Aurora-Broomfield MSA.

The Denver-Aurora-Broomfield MSA, the Boulder MSA, and the Greeley MSA comprise the larger Denver-Aurora-Boulder Combined Statistical Area. Local residents generally use the term Denver area or Denver metro area which may informally mean anything from the continuously urbanized area within the six central counties of the MSA to the Front Range Urban Corridor north of Colorado Springs and south of Fort Collins.

The central part of the MSA includes the City and County of Denver and its three immediately adjoining counties: Jefferson County to the west, Adams County to the north and east, and Arapahoe County to the south and east. The continuously urbanized area extends northwest into the City and County of Broomfield, bordering Jefferson and Adams counties, and south into Douglas County, adjoining Arapahoe County. The most prosperous parts of the area are in the south, while the most industrialized areas are in the northeast, specifically in the northern part of Denver proper and extending to areas such as Commerce City in Adams County.

Also included in the MSA defined by the United States Census Bureau are four rural counties that are not popularly considered part of the Denver metro area. Elbert County is on the southeastern prairie; Clear Creek, Gilpin, and Park counties are in the Rocky Mountains.

Although the counties, cities, and towns are self-governing, there is some cooperation in the metropolitan area. The Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG, pronounced Doctor Cog) is a regional planning and inter-governmental coordination organization in a nine-county region. The Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD) provides funding for scientific and cultural facilities in a seven-county region including:

In addition, the Regional Transportation District (RTD) provides mass transit, including a light rail system. In 2005 the RTD developed a twelve-year comprehensive plan, called "FasTracks", to build and operate rail transit lines and expand and improve bus service throughout the region.

The center of the metropolitan area sits in a valley, the Denver Basin, and suffers from air pollution known colloquially as the brown cloud, building up if the air is stagnant as it often is in the winter. Severity of pollution in this area has varied enormously over the years. In the late 1980s the area was frequently in violation of multiple National Ambient Air Quality Standards established by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) was formed in 1989 to create plans to address the problem. Through a variety of measures the area's air quality was improved and in 2002 the EPA designated the area in compliance with all federal health-based air quality standards. Denver was the first major city in the United States to reach compliance with all six of these standards after previously violating five of them[2] Since then the EPA introduced a new standard for small particulates and made the existing ozone standard stricter. In 2003 the new ozone standard was frequently exceeded in the area and was occasionally exceeded as far away as Rocky Mountain National Park. The RAQC hopes to implement plans enabling the area to comply with the new standards by 2007.

Contents

Counties

The Denver-Aurora-Broomfield Metropolitan Statistical Area comprises ten counties.[3] The sortable table below includes the following information:

  1. The name of the county
  2. The population of the county as of 2007-07-01, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau[1]
  3. The county population as of 2000-04-01, as counted by the United States Census 2000[1]
  4. The percent county population change from 2000-04-01, to 2007-07-01, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau[1]


Denver-Aurora-Broomfield Metropolitan Statistical Area
County 2010 Pop 2000 Pop Δ Pop
DenverCity and County of Denver, Colorado 600,158 554,636 A08+8.2%
Arapahoe County, Colorado 572,003 487,967 A06+17.2%
Jefferson County, Colorado 534,543 527,056 A09+0.1%
Adams County, Colorado 441,603 363,857 A03+21.4%
Douglas County, Colorado 285,465 175,766 A01+62.4%
BroomfieldCity and County of Broomfield, Colorado 55,889 0 A00NA
Elbert County, Colorado 23,086 19,872 A04+16.2%
Park County, Colorado 16,206 14,523 A02+11.6%
Clear Creek County, Colorado 9,008 9,322 A10-0.3%
Gilpin County, Colorado 5,441 4,757 A07+14.4%
Total 2,543,352 2,157,756 A05+17.9%

Metropolitan area cities and towns

Places with over 500,000 inhabitants

Places with over 300,000 inhabitants

Places with over 100,000 inhabitants

Places with 10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants

Places with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants

Communities previously part of the denver metro area

Former denver metro communities now part of the separate boulder metropolitan area due to being located in boulder county

Former denver metro communities now part of the separate greeley metropolitan area due to being located in southwestern weld county

Sister cities

Though Arvada, Aurora, Boulder, Brighton, Broomfield, Denver, Lakewood and Longmont have their own individual sister city relationships, the Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG) as a whole has a sister city relationship with the Iraq Baghdad Governorate of Iraq.[4]

See also

United States census statistical areas by state, district, or territory
AS
MP
GU
VI

References

External links



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