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The London travel to work area in 2001 (dark blue), with the administrative boundary of Greater London shown. The London travel to work area, defined by the Office for National Statistics as the area for which "of the resident economically active population, at least 75% actually work in the area, and also, that of everyone working in the area, at least 75% actually live in the area."
A labelled map of the Greater London Built-up Area with administrative borders. The Greater London Built-up Area, or Greater London Urban Area, is a conurbation in south-east England that constitutes the continuous urban sprawl of London, and includes surrounding adjacent urban towns as defined by the Office for National Statistics. [1]
The term "Greater London" was used before it was established by statute in 1965. It referred to the Metropolitan Police District, the area served by the Metropolitan Water Board, the London Passenger Transport Area, and the area defined by the Registrar General as the "Greater London Conurbation".
Population density map. London's continuous urban area extends beyond Greater London and numbered 9,787,426 people in 2011, [3] while its wider metropolitan area had a population of 12–14 million, depending on the definition used. [194] According to Eurostat, London is the second most populous metropolitan area in Europe. A net 726,000 ...
In 2004 the London Plan of the Mayor of London defined a metropolitan region with a population of 18 million. [16] Eurostat has developed a harmonising standard for comparing metropolitan areas in the European Union and the population of the London Larger Urban Zone is 11,917,000; it occupies an area of 8,920 square kilometres (3,440 sq mi ...
Map of the London area, with the London Travel to Work Area highlighted in red. Date: 15 January 2013: Source: Office of National Statistics Geography. Urban area data; TTWA data; Ordnance Survey OpenData. Administrative borders and coastline data from Boundary-Line product. River, lakes, roads and railway data from Meridian 2 product. Author
The 20 largest ESPON metropolitan areas in the UK, ranked by population. A 2001 ESPON metropolitan area was defined as consisting of an urban area , conurbation or agglomeration , together with the surrounding area to which it was closely economically and socially integrated through commuting .
John Strype's map of 1720 describes London as consisting of four parts: The City of London, Westminster, Southwark and the eastern 'That Part Beyond the Tower'. [1] As London expanded, it absorbed many hundreds of existing towns and villages which continued to assert their local identities.