Is it just me that finds it extremely unhelpful that the
US Census Bureau lumps Lowell, Lawrance, Framingham, and Brockton with Boston (and Fall River somehow gets merged with Providence... SMH)?
Yet the Census Bureau was also kind enough to split the entire Bay Area, Houston, Dallas, Charlotte, and Phoenix into dozens of pieces, while Boston was merged,
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Lowell and Lawrence feel like they are a completely
distanct urban core separate from Boston (look at the linked map below). They are barely even connected and require travelling through miles and miles of
wooded areas between Medford (a suburb of Boston) and Lowell to get between Medford and Lowell. Fall River is cut off by 2 bodies of water away from Providence.
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Absolutely wild that Boston somehow has 4.38 million in its "urban area" and could be considered "bigger than Detroit (3.77M)", or "comparable size to Melbourne (4.58M)". Is Boston really bigger than Detroit or a comparable size to Melbourne? Melbourne looks like it's significantly much larger and bigger than Boston, but officially, Boston's urban area is only 200k less than Melbourne. Detroit also appears like it's a lot bigger than Boston, not smaller.
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Put Boston against Vancouver (2.46M) and they appear very similar in size. Boston looks like it may be slightly, marginally bigger than Baltimore (2.21M), but seems
smaller than Denver (2.68M), and much more smaller than
Minneapolis (2.91M).
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When I did my
fantasy frequent transit network calculation for how much of Boston could be covered with high frequency service, I had obtained a value of 1,459,620 for the parts of Boston that I had covered with fantasy frequent transit service (including some coverage gaps where portions of high density areas are inaccessible from the street grid/bus grid/rail grid). This value is only 33.3% of the 4,382,009 figure the Census Bureau reported for Boston's urban area. This seems quite awful, as if 66.7% of Greater Boston's "urban" area would be left unserved by such a fantasy MBTA network. This is despite Boston allegedly being one of the "most walkable cities" in the United States! Perhaps the 4.3 million figure is artificially inflating Boston in the population rankings? Or maybe Boston has one of the worst urban sprawls in the United States?
The US Census Bureau
has Los Angeles, famous for it's highways, spawl, and traffic jams, with a population density of 2,886 people per sq kilometer; while Boston is only 1,021 people per square km, with Boston bigger than LA! Yikes. When I instead calculated my
fantasy frequent transit network coverage against only Boston's streetcar suburbs, I instead obtained a percent coverage of 86.9% rather than 33.3%. This gives a ~1.68 million figure for what could be considered "Boston". However, the US Census Bureau only
gives Boston either 675,647 (governing limits), 4,382,009 (urban limits), 4,941,632 (metro limits), or 8,466,186 (CSA), as population figures to report form.
In your opinion, how "big" would you consider Boston to be, compared to other US, Canadian, Australian, or English cities? Do other folks consider Boston to be comparably sized with Vancouver or Baltimore; or with Melbourne and Philly? (For example, Brisbane is reported to have 2.28M population, Toronto with 5.64M).
The bounds of the MBTA bus/RTA bus districts seems to be the most useful for demarcating the edge of Boston before Lowell/Brockton/Framingham/etc (BERy+Lynn/Quincy/etc. is also useful too). I often feel like Boston better belongs somewhere in the 2 million range in the list of cities (nearby to Brisbane/Vancouver/Manchester/Baltimore), and it's pretty absurd it's always somewhere in the 4 million range close by to Philly and Sydney and above Detroit (where Boston really should
not be located). The CR only takes 13 minutes to get from North Station to West Medford to reach the end of the city (and if it were a regional rail/GLX hybrid making all local stops, 19 minutes to downtown). The Sydney Metro, on the other hand, takes 55 minutes to travel from the CBD just to get to the end of the line at the end of the city. (So yes, it's a bit silly for RMTransit to compare Boston with... Toronto... like how absurd it is, comparing a Boston railroad route with one from Sydney below)
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