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Kansas City Metropolitan Area

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Kansas City, MO-KS

Common name: Kansas City Metropolitan Area
Largest city
Other cities
Kansas City, Missouri
 - Overland Park, Kansas
 - Kansas City, Kansas
 - Independence, Missouri
 - Olathe, Kansas
 - Lee's Summit, Missouri
Population  Ranked 27th in the U.S.
 - Total
| 1,947,694 (2005 est.)
 - Density
| 244/sq. mi. 153/km²
Area 7,976 sq. mi.
12,762 km²
State(s)   - Missouri
 - Kansas
Elevation   
 - Highest point
| ?1 feet (?1 m)
 - Lowest point
| ?1 feet (?1 m)
The Kansas City Metropolitan Area is a metropolitan area situated at the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri Rivers and straddling the state border between Missouri and Kansas. The 15-county Kansas City Metropolitan Statistical Area, anchored by Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas, is the 27th largest in the United States with an estimated population of 1,947,694 in the year 2005. The Combined Statistical Area also includes the Micropolitan Statistical Areas of Atchison, Kansas, and Warrensburg, Missouri, with estimated populations of 10,232 and 16,741, respectively. The Combined Statistical Area of Kansas City had a population of 2,015,282 in the year 2005.

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Geographic overview

Large printable map The core of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area can be visualized roughly as four quadrants:

The northeast quadrant is locally referred to as "north of the river" (Missouri River) or "the Northland". (Often confused with Northtown, a nickname for North Kansas City) Contained wholly within Missouri, it encompasses portions of Clay County including the northern half of Kansas City, Missouri, and the cities of Liberty, and North Kansas City. The sharpest part of the river bend forms a peninsula containing the Kansas City Downtown Airport.

The southeast quadrant is the core of the metro area and includes the southern half of Kansas City, Missouri, and the Jackson County, Missouri, suburbs of Independence, Lee's Summit, Raytown, Grandview, and Blue Springs. It is sometimes called "the southland". It includes the majority of the metro area's businesses, visitor attractions, cultural institutions, and urban neighborhoods.

The southwest quadrant includes all of Johnson County, Kansas, which includes the towns in the area known as Shawnee Mission. Interstate 35 runs diagonally through Johnson County from the southwest to downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

The northwest quandrant contains Wyandotte County, Kansas, and parts of Platte County, Missouri. Wyandotte County, sometimes referred to as just 'Wyandotte', which contains Kansas City, Kansas, Bonner Springs and Edwardsville, is governed by a single unified government similar to a consolidated city-county. Often the Wyandotte government is referred to simply as 'The Unified Government'. Another bend in the Missouri River forms the county line between Wyandotte and Platte counties to the north and northeast.

In all, nearly 2 million people live in the metropolitan area. It is difficult to state exactly the size of the population because there are no natural boundaries and suburban expansion (or sprawl) is ongoing.

Cities

Anchor city

Suburbs with 100,000 or more inhabitants

Suburbs with 10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants

 

Suburbs with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants

  • Mission Woods, Kansas
  • Missouri City, Missouri
  • North Kansas City, Missouri
  • Northmoor, Missouri
  • Oak Grove, Missouri
  • Oaks, Missouri
  • Oakview, Missouri
  • Oakwood, Missouri
  • Oakwood Park, Missouri
  • Odessa, Missouri
  • Parkville, Missouri
  • Peculiar, Missouri
  • Platte City, Missouri
  • Platte Woods, Missouri
  • Pleasant Valley, Missouri
  • Pleasant Hill, Missouri
  • Randolph, Missouri
  • River Bend, Missouri
  • Riverside, Missouri
  • Roeland Park, Kansas
  • Sibley, Missouri
  • Smithville, Missouri
  • Spring Hill, Kansas
  • Sugar Creek, Missouri
  • Tonganoxie, Kansas
  • Unity Village, Missouri
  • Weatherby Lake, Missouri
  • Westwood, Kansas
  • Westwood Hills, Kansas
  • The metropolitan area is experiencing continued growth. Between 2003 and 2005, about 32,148 housing permits were issued in the metropolitan area.#redirect [[Template:Fact]]

    Counties

    The Kansas City metropolitan area includes all or part of the following counties: As of 2003, the United States Census Bureau included the following counties as part of Kansas City's metropolitan statistical area:

    Associated areas

    Although associated with Kansas City, Lawrence, Kansas; St. Joseph, Missouri; and Warrensburg, Missouri, are identified as separate MSAs.

    Transportation

    Some of Kansas City's interstates include: Other major highways:

    Local navigation tips

    ''See related article: [WikiTravel entry on Kansas City, Missouri]

    Street Numbers

    The Missouri side of the Metropolitan Area share a grid system with Johnson County on the Kansas Side with most east-west streets numbered and north-south streets named. Addresses on east-west streets are numbered from Main Street in Kansas City, Missouri, and on north-south streets from St. John Avenue (or the Missouri River, in the River Market area). The direction 'South' in street and address numbers is generally implied if 'N' is not specified, except for numbered 'avenues' in North Kansas City. In most of Wyandotte County, Kansas the north-south streets are numbered and the address numbers are measured from Riverview Avenue. Some suburbs use completely independent numbering schemes.

    Highways

    Rush Hours

    The center of Kansas City is roughly contained inside the downtown loop (shaded in red).
    The center of Kansas City is roughly contained inside the downtown loop (shaded in red).

    Navigation Landmarks

    Areas of the metro

    Educational institutions

    Post-secondary

    In Kansas City, Missouri:
    Penn Valley
    Maple Woods
    Business and Technology Center
    Blue River
    Longview
  • Midwestern Baptist College
  • Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
  • National American University
  • Nazarene Theological Seminary
  • Rockhurst University
  • University of Missouri - Kansas City
  • University of Phoenix - Kansas City
  • Webster University - Kansas City
  • Vatterott College
  • On the Missouri Side: On the Kansas Side: In Nearby Lawrence: Other Nearby Missouri Educational Institutions:

    Elementary and Secondary

    Missouri schools
    • Blue Springs School District
      Blue Springs HS
      Blue Springs South HS
    • Center School District
      Center HS
    • Excelsior Springs School District
      Excelsior Springs HS
      Excelsior Springs Area Career Center
    • Fort Osage School District
      Fort Osage HS
    • Grandview C-4 School District
      Grandview HS
    • Hickman Mills C-1 School District
      Hickman Mills HS
      Ruskin HS
    • Independence School District
      Truman HS
      William Chrisman HS
    • Kansas City Missouri School District
      Central High School
      Lincoln Prep Academy
      Paseo Academy of Fine and Performing Arts
      Southeast High School
      Van Horn High School
      Northeast High School
      Manuel Technical Vocational School
    • Lee's Summit R-VII School District
      Lee's Summit Senior High School
      Lee's Summit North High School
      Lee's Summit West High School
    • Liberty School District
      Liberty HS
    • North Kansas City School District
      North Kansas City HS
      Oak Park HS
      Staley HS
      Winnetonka HS
    • Park Hill School District
      Park Hill South HS
      Park Hill HS
    • The Pembroke Hill School
    • Raytown C-2 School District
      Raytown HS
      Raytown South HS
    • Rockhurst High School
    • St. Pius X High School
    Kansas schools

    Media

    Print Media

    The primary newspaper of the metropolitan area is The Kansas City Star. The McClatchy Company, the owner of The Star, also owns the suburban weeklies Lee's Summit Journal and Olathe Journal.

    The five-day daily "Kansas City Kansan" serves Wyandotte County. Additional weekly papers in the metropolitan include the Liberty Tribune, Sun Newspapers of Johnson County and the Northland, The Examiner in Independence and Eastern Jackson County, and The Pitch. Two newspapers serve the area's faith communities: "The Metro Voice Christian Newspaper" and the "Jewish Chronicle".

    Broadcast Media

    According to Arbitron, about 1.5 million people over the age of 12 are part of the Kansas City DMA, making it the 29th largest market for radio and 31st for television Nielsen ratings.

    Television

    Kansas City metro television stations, with all major network affiliates represented, include:

    Radio

    Over 30 FM and 20 AM stations broadcast in the Kansas City area, with stations from Topeka, St. Joseph, and Carrollton also reaching into the metropolitan. The highest rated radio stations according to Arbitron:
    Public and community radio
    KANU-FM and KTBG-FM, both college radio stations, are also NPR affiliates
  • KKFI-FM Locally-owned not-for-profit station
  • Specialty Radio
    Hispanics account for five percent of the market and are served by three AM radio stations (KCZZ, KDTD, and KKHK) and a Univision affiliate, KUKC-LP.

    Business interests

    The Kansas City Metropolitan Area's largest private employer is Sprint Nextel Corporation. The international telecommunications company maintains its global operational headquarters at its 200-acre campus facility in south Overland Park. During 2003, the company employed nearly 18,500 people in the five-county metropolitan area, with wages of more than $1.16 billion generating $58 million in local and state income taxes. Sprint spent more than $21 million on property taxes and $1.74 billion for goods and services from area businesses. Since the merger, Sprint Nextel's corporate headquarters moved to Reston, Virginia, and the company spun off its local telephone service into a new company called Embarq, also based in Overland Park.

    Other major employers are AT&T, BNSF Railway, Hallmark Cards, Harley-Davidson, General Motors, Honeywell, and Ford Motor Company. Kansas City also has a large pharmaceutical industry, with companies such as Bayer and Aventis having large presences.

    Headquarters

    The following companies and organizations are headquarted in the area: Kansas City has a Federal Reserve Bank.

    Retail centers

    Local organizations

    External links

    State of Missouri
    Capital Jefferson City
    Regions Bootheel | Little Dixie | St. Francois Mountains | Ozark Plateau | Northern Plains | Missouri Rhineland | Lincoln Hills | Lead Belt | Platte Purchase | Dissected Till Plains | Osage Plains | Mississippi Alluvial Plain
    Metropolitan Areas St. Louis | Kansas City | Springfield | Joplin | Columbia | Jefferson City | St. Joseph
    Micropolitan Areas Branson | Cape Girardeau, Jackson, MO-IL | Farmington | Fort Leonard Wood | Hannibal | Kennett | Kirksville | Lebanon | Marshall | Maryville | Mexico | Moberly | Poplar Bluff | Rolla | Sedalia | Sikeston | Warrensburg | West Plains

    Largest Cities Kansas City | St. Louis | Springfield | Independence | Columbia | Lee's Summit | St. Joseph | O'Fallon | St. Charles | St. Peters | Florissant | Blue Springs | Chesterfield | Joplin | University City | Jefferson City | Cape Girardeau | Wildwood | Ballwin | Raytown | Liberty | Kirkwood | Gladstone | Hazelwood | Maryland Heights
    Counties Adair | Andrew | Atchison | Audrain | Barry | Barton | Bates | Benton | Bollinger | Boone | Buchanan | Butler | Caldwell | Callaway | Camden | Cape Girardeau | Carroll | Carter | Cass | Cedar | Chariton | Christian | Clark | Clay | Clinton | Cole | Cooper | Crawford | Dade | Dallas | Daviess | DeKalb | Dent | Douglas | Dunklin | Franklin | Gasconade | Gentry | Greene | Grundy | Harrison | Henry | Hickory | Holt | Howard | Howell | Iron | Jackson | Jasper | Jefferson | Johnson | Knox | Laclede | Lafayette | Lawrence | Lewis | Lincoln | Linn | Livingston | Macon | Madison | Maries | Marion | McDonald | Mercer | Miller | Mississippi | Moniteau | Monroe | Montgomery | Morgan | New Madrid | Newton | Nodaway | Oregon | Osage | Ozark | Pemiscot | Perry | Pettis | Phelps | Pike | Platte | Polk | Pulaski | Putnam | Ralls | Randolph | Ray | Reynolds | Ripley | St. Charles | St. Clair | St. Francois | St. Louis (City) | St. Louis County | Ste. Genevieve | Saline | Schuyler | Scotland | Scott | Shannon | Shelby | Stoddard | Stone | Sullivan | Taney | Texas | Vernon | Warren | Washington | Wayne | Webster | Worth | Wright
    State of Kansas

    Capital: Topeka
    Regions: Cherokee Strip | East Central | Flint Hills | High Plains | Kansas City Metropolitan Area | Santa Fe Trail Region | Smoky Hills | Red Hills | Southeast
    Largest Cities: Dodge City | Emporia | Garden City | Hays | Hutchinson | Junction City | Kansas City | Lawrence | Leavenworth | Leawood | Lenexa | Manhattan | Olathe | Overland Park | Pittsburg | Prairie Village | Salina | Shawnee | Topeka | Wichita
    Counties: Allen | Anderson | Atchison | Barber | Barton | Bourbon | Brown | Butler | Chase | Chautauqua | Cherokee | Cheyenne | Clark | Clay | Cloud | Coffey | Comanche | Cowley | Crawford | Decatur | Dickinson | Doniphan | Douglas | Edwards | Elk | Ellis | Ellsworth | Finney | Ford | Franklin | Geary | Gove | Graham | Grant | Gray | Greeley | Greenwood | Hamilton | Harper | Harvey | Haskell | Hodgeman | Jackson | Jefferson | Jewell | Johnson | Kearny | Kingman | Kiowa | Labette | Lane | Leavenworth | Lincoln | Linn | Logan | Lyon | Marion | Marshall | McPherson | Meade | Miami | Mitchell | Montgomery | Morris | Morton | Nemaha | Neosho | Ness | Norton | Osage | Osborne | Ottawa | Pawnee | Phillips | Pottawatomie | Pratt | Rawlins | Reno | Republic | Rice | Riley | Rooks | Rush | Russell | Saline | Scott | Sedgwick | Seward | Shawnee | Sheridan | Sherman | Smith | Stafford | Stanton | Stevens | Sumner | Thomas | Trego | Wabaunsee | Wallace | Washington | Wichita | Wilson | Woodson | Wyandotte

     


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