Kansas City metropolitan area

Kansas City, MO-KS

Common name: Kansas City Metropolitan Area

Largest city Kansas City, Missouri
Other cities  - Overland Park
 - Kansas City, KS
 - Independence
 - Olathe
 - Lee's Summit
 - Shawnee
 - Blue Springs
 - Lenexa
Population  Ranked 29th in the U.S.
 - Total 2,035,335
 - Density 260.0/sq. mi. 
100.4/km²
Area 7,952 sq. mi.
20,596 km²
State(s)   - Missouri
 - Kansas
Elevation   
 - Highest point 11601 feet (353.51 m)
 - Lowest point 6901 feet (210.31 m)

The Kansas City Metropolitan Area is a fifteen-county metropolitan area that is anchored by Kansas City, Missouri and is bisected by the border between the states of Missouri and Kansas. As of the 2010 Census, the metropolitan area has a population of 2,035,334. The metropolitan area is the second largest metropolitan area in Missouri after Greater St. Louis and is the largest metropolitan area with territory in Kansas, ahead of Wichita. The metropolitan area includes numerous large suburbs including the following which have a population exceeding 100,000: Independence, Missouri; Kansas City, Kansas; Olathe, Kansas; and Overland Park, Kansas.

In 2007, Worldwide ERC and Primary Relocation recognized Kansas City third overall as one of the "Best Cities for Relocating Families" in the United States. Also in 2010, Money Magazine rated Overland Park, Kansas, the 7th best city to live in the United States.[1] Neighboring city Olathe, Kansas, was rated 11th, Lee's Summit, Missouri 27th best, and Shawnee, Kansas, 39th best. Kansas City is one of two metro areas to have two cities in the top fifteen.[2]

Contents

Geographic overview

The Kansas City Metropolitan Area can be visualized roughly by the following divisions:

Northland

Northland refers to all that portion of the metro area within Missouri and located north of the Missouri River. The Northland is largely suburban in character with industrial uses and pre-World War II development along the Missouri River. Places in the Northland are commonly referred to as being "north of the river" (Missouri River). Sometimes the area is referred to as "Kansas City North", which should not be confused with "North Kansas City", an independent city located directly across the river from downtown Kansas City, MO.. The Northland encompasses portions of Clay County and Platte County and includes the suburban areas of Kansas City, Missouri as well as the metro area's northern suburbs such as Riverside, Parkville, Liberty, Excelsior Springs, North Kansas City, Smithville, Kearney, Platte City, and Gladstone.

The Northland is home to the Charles B. Wheeler Airport, Kansas City International Airport, Worlds of Fun, Oceans of Fun, and Zona Rosa, a large-scale mixed use development and regional attraction, as well as most of the metro area's riverboat casinos.

The Northland does not include downtown Kansas City, Missouri, though the city's boundaries extend far into the Northland. In contrast to that portion of Kansas City, Missouri south of the river, that portion in the Northland is largely suburban.

The portion of Kansas City located north of the river has streets numbered up from the line of the Missouri river and St. John Avenue. East of I-435, in the cities of Sugar Creek and Independence, the line continues onto Kentucky Avenue and E. Salisbury Road, respectively. The north-south street names continue into Clay county from Jackson county, but not into Platte county. This is because across the river from Platte county is Kansas City, Kansas. All of the east-west streets in the Northland have the prefix N.E. or N.W. All of the north-south streets have the prefix N.

Downtown

Downtown is the historic center of the city of Kansas City, Missouri, located entirely within the city of Kansas City, Missouri and containing the original townsite, business districts and residential neighborhoods of the city. Downtown is bounded by the Missouri River on the north, the state line on the west, 31st Street on the south and the Blue River on the east. Downtown includes the central business district and its buildings which form the city's skyline.

Downtown Loop

This area contains the central business district and is surrounded by the downtown loop formed by Interstates 670, 70, and 35. Within the downtown loop are many of the tall buildings and skyscrapers forming the city's skyline. Also within the downtown loop are small, distinct neighborhoods such as Quality Hill, the Garment District, the Financial District, the Convention Center District, and the Power and Light District.

Other downtown neighborhoods

Other neighborhoods within Downtown are the River Market and Columbus Park, both located between the downtown loop and the Missouri River. Between the downtown loop and the state line are Westside neighborhood and the West Bottoms, located at the bottom of the bluff adjacent to Kaw Point. East of the loop are the 18th & Vine District, the North Bottoms, East Bottoms, Northeast, and Pendleton Heights. South of the loop is the Crossroads District, Union Hill, Crown Center, Hospital Hill, Longfellow, Wendell Phillips, and Washington Wheatley.

Downtown attractions

The Kansas City Convention Center, Municipal Auditorium, City Hall, Lyric Theater, Midland Theater, Ilus Davis Park, Barney Allis Plaza, are located within the central business district inside the downtown loop. The Sprint Center and the College Basketball Experience are located within Power & Light District, also within the downtown loop. The Kaufman Center for the Performing Arts is perched upon a high point immediately south of the downtown loop. South of the loop is the Crossroads District, Union Station, Crown Center, the National World War I Museum, Liberty Memorial, Penn Valley Park, Truman Medical Center, Children's Mercy Hospital, and the 18th & Vine District. North of the loop is, City Market within the River Market and Richard L. Berkeley Riverfront Park. West of the loop within the West Bottoms are Kemper Arena, and Hale Arena.

Midtown

This area is located just south of downtown Kansas City, Missouri, bounded by 31st Street on the north, the state line on the west, 75th Street on the south, and the Blue River on the east. Midtown, is contained entirely within Kansas City, Missouri, and is largely considered to be the core of the metro area as it contains numerous cultural attractions, shopping and entertainment areas, large hospitals, universities, and the metro areas most densely-populated neighborhoods.

Midtown neighborhoods

Midtown consists of numerous distinct and/or historic neighborhoods such as Westport, Volker, Ivanhoe, the Country Club Plaza, the Country Club District, Hyde Park, Ward Parkway, Armour Hills, Brookside, Waldo, West Plaza, South Plaza, Southmoreland, Valentine, Coleman Highlands and Rockhill.

Midtown attractions

Midtown is home to a majority of the metro area's regional entertainment, shopping, medical, and cultural attractions. Entertainment attractions are found throughout and include the 39th Street corridor, Westport, the Country Club Plaza, Brookside and Waldo. Shopping is centered on the Country Club Plaza, which contains numerous luxury retailers, hotels, and restaurants. Brookside and Westport also contain smaller scale, neighborhood-oriented and niche market retailers. Midtown is home to Saint Luke's Hospital and Research Medical Center. Cultural attractions include the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Rockhurst University, Kansas City Art Institute, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Anita B. Gorman Conservation Discovery Center, Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Midwest Research Institute, Penn Valley Community College, the Tivoli Theater, Uptown Theater, Madrid Theater, Unicorn Theater, Starlight Theater, the Kansas City Zoo, Loose Park, and Swope Park.

South KC

Also known as "South Kansas City" this area consists of is the southern half of Kansas City, Missouri as well as the suburbs of Lee's Summit, Grandview, Harrisonville, Belton, Raymore. It is sometimes called "the southland."

The Eastside is an area of the metro that contains the eastern urban side of Kansas City, Missouri as well as the suburbs of Independence, Blue Springs and Raytown. This part of town is best known for the Truman Sports Complex where the Royals and Chiefs play.

Johnson County

Also referred to as "JoCo" this area includes all of Johnson County, Kansas, including the affluent southwestern suburbs of Overland Park, Leawood, Lenexa, Olathe, Shawnee, and De Soto. Interstate 35 runs diagonally through Johnson County from the southwest toward the northeast and downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

Wyandotte or the western side of the metro contains Wyandotte County, Kansas. Wyandotte County, sometimes referred to as just 'Wyandotte', 'WyCo', or 'The Dotte', contains Kansas City, Kansas, Bonner Springs and Edwardsville, and it 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'. This area is best known for NASCAR's Kansas Speedway, CommunityAmerica Ballpark, home to the T-Bones and Livestrong Sporting Park home to Sporting Kansas City. Another bend in the Missouri River forms the county line between Wyandotte and Platte counties to the north and northeast.

In all, just over 2 million people live in the metropolitan area as of July 1, 2009. It is difficult to state exactly the size of the population because there are few natural boundaries and suburban expansion (or sprawl) is ongoing.[3]

Metropolitan area

Anchor city

100,000 or more inhabitants

10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants

 

1,000 to 10,000 inhabitants

fewer than 1,000 inhabitants

The metropolitan area is experiencing continued growth. Between July 2000 and July 2007, the population in the Kansas City MSA grew from 1,842,965 to an estimated 2,037,357, an increase of 10 percent.[4]

Counties

County State 2010 Population[5] 2000 Population
Bates Missouri 17,049 16,653
Caldwell Missouri 9,424 8,969
Cass Missouri 99,478 82,092
Clay Missouri 221,939 184,006
Clinton Missouri 20,743 18,979
Franklin Kansas 25,992 24,784
Jackson Missouri 674,158 654,880
Johnson Kansas 544,179 451,086
Lafayette Missouri 33,381 32,960
Leavenworth Kansas 76,227 68,691
Linn Kansas 9,656 9,570
Miami Kansas 32,787 28,351
Platte Missouri 89,322 73,781
Ray Missouri 23,494 23,354
Wyandotte Kansas 157,505 157,882

The MSA covers a total area of 7,952 sq mi (20,600 km2). 7,855 sq. mi. is land and 97 sq mi (250 km2). is water.

Associated areas

Often associated with Kansas City, the cities of Lawrence, Kansas and St. Joseph, Missouri are identified as separate Metropolitan Statistical Areas.[6]

The Kansas City-Overland Park-Kansas City, MO-KS Combined Statistical Area, which encompasses the Kansas City MO-KS MSA, the Warrensburg, MO µSA (Johnson County, Missouri), and the Atchison, KS µSA (Atchison County, Kansas), covers a total area of 9,220 sq. mi. 9,117 sq mi (23,610 km2). is land and 103 sq mi (270 km2). is water.

Transportation

The Kansas City metropolitan area has by far more freeway lane-miles per capita than any other large metropolitan area in the United States, over 27% more than the second-place Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex, over 50% more than the average American metro area and nearly 75% more than the large metro area with the least, Las Vegas.[7]

Kansas City is also served by long-distance Amtrak trains from Union Station.

Some of Kansas City's interstates include:

Other major highways:

Other notable roads:

Local navigation tips

See related article: WikiTravel entry on Kansas City, Missouri

Street numbers

The Missouri side of the Metropolitan Area shares a grid system with Johnson County on the Kansas Side. Most east-west streets are numbered and most 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 'North' 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. A few suburbs use completely independent numbering schemes; however, the majority use the Kansas City, MO system, even in Kansas.

Highways

Navigation landmarks

Areas of the metro

Educational institutions

Post-secondary

In Kansas City, Missouri:

MCC-Penn Valley
MCC-Maple Woods
MCC-Business and Technology Center
MCC-Blue River
MCC-Longview

On the Missouri side of the Missouri River:

On the Kansas side of the Missouri River:

In nearby Lawrence:

Other nearby Missouri educational institutions:

Secondary

Missouri schools Kansas schools

Libraries

Media

Print media

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

The Kansas City Kansan serves Wyandotte County having moved from print to an online format in 2009. 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". "Dos Mundos" is the area's primary newspaper that serves the Spanish speaking community with articles printed in Spanish and English. A monthly newspaper, The Monitor, covers politics and policy-related news from a Center-right perspective.

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 30th 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
Specialty TV and 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 world headquarters at its 200-acre (0.81 km2) campus facility in south Overland Park. During 2005, 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. Sprint's headquarters was temporarily moved to Reston Virginia in 2003 after it merged with Nextel. Since then, the world headquarters has been reconsolidated in Overland Park.[11]

Other major employers and business enterprises are AT&T, BNSF Railway, Asurion, Cerner, Citigroup, EMBARQ, Farmers Insurance Group, Garmin, Hallmark Cards, Harley-Davidson, Husqvarna, General Motors, Honeywell, Ford Motor Company, MillerCoors, State Street Corporation, The Kansas City Star, some of which may be headquartered in the "metro". Kansas City also has a large pharmaceutical industry, with companies such as Bayer and Aventis having large presences.

Headquarters

The following companies and organizations (excluding educational institutions) are among the larger one's headquartered in the metro area (noting cities of headquarters office if not Kansas City, MO):

The Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank is one of the U.S.'s twelve such banks.

Shopping centers

Local organizations

See also

References

External links