Bangkok Metropolitan Region

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Map of Bangkok Metropolitan Area

The Bangkok Metropolitan Region (Thai: กรุงเทพมหานครและปริมณฑล; RTGS: Krung Thep Mahanakhon Lae Parimonthon; Literally: Bangkok and surrounding provinces), also known as Greater Bangkok, is the urban conglomeration of Bangkok, Thailand, which includes the city and the 5 adjacent provinces of Nakhon Pathom, Pathum Thani, Nonthaburi, Samut Prakan and Samut Sakhon.

Area and population

The Bangkok Metropolitan Region covers an area of 7,761.50 km² and has an estimated population of 11,971,000 (January 1, 2008),[1] with a population density of 1,301.42 per km². Due to the success of the service and tourism industry in Bangkok, the city has gained in popularity for work among provincial Thais from the rural areas and with people from many countries in the Indochina region as well as many South Asian countries. In the past 20–30 years, there has been a large influx of Indians, Pakistanis, Persians, Burmese, Cambodians, Laotians, Indonesians, Malaysians, Nepalis, Filipinos, Chinese and others emigrating to Bangkok. There are large numbers of workers who reside outside the metropolitan area and travel into the city for day jobs. The population swells to 15-20 million in the city during the day. However, during New Year's break, Songkran break and other long weekends, the capital often seems deserted of many taxi drivers, side street vendors and other forms of informal services many illegal residents engage in.

Urban build-up

Many consider Bangkok's built up area limited only within the Bangkok province, however, large communities and centers are currently cropping up throughout the metropolitan area. The rapid growth of suburban development is increasingly connecting these city centers. Much similar to Los Angeles, the city's many urban centers are now turning into cities in themselves and certain Bangkokians no longer enter the city core area due to businesses basing their headquarters at different city centers of the city. The built up area consists primarily of Bangkok province, parts of Samut Prakan province, parts of Nonthaburi province, parts of Pathum Thani province, and the border areas of Samut Sakhon and Nakhon Pathom to the Bangkok province. Samut Prakan, Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani and Samut Sakhon all have a city center and downtown core as they were once separate cities and due to the large growth of suburbs along the outskirts of Bangkok, have created an extremely large conglomeration of the urban area. Bangkok's freeways are one way for many middle class workers to commute to city centers. However, lower class workers normally work in areas of their residence unless they are employed by companies, they would use the city's extensive bus routes or carpool with tens of workers in the early hours of the morning.

Currently, the city's growth is not stricken to a certain area. The land value of the downtown core in each city is skyrocketing especially in the Bangkok downtown giving rise to a Manhattanization in city core areas. The outskirts of each city is growing and the boundaries are no longer visible between each province and city center. Due to the speed of this urban sprawl over the past twenty years, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has sought to tackle rising problems of commute times, pollution and deteriorating air quality. Recent administrations have been relatively successful in conserving the air quality, however the city still lacks an effective mass transit network and a clean and resolving plan on implementing environmental practices. This form of urbanization is not only limited to Bangkok but traces can be found in metropolitan areas where there has been a quick surge in population. The Pattaya-Chonburi Metropolitan Area is a prime example due to the increase in residential high rise living and the rush for commercial office space. The shared infrastructure of Greater Bangkok and Greater Pattaya-Chon Buri, being physically close, helps fuel the latter's torrid development.

Population Table

Administrative Area Area
km²
Population
(2000Cf)
Population
(2010Cp)
Population
(2011 Registered)
Population
(Sep, 2013 Registered)
Pop.Density
Inh/km²(2010C)
Bangkok Metropolis1,568.7376,355,1448,249,1175,674,8435,683,6865,258.6
Nonthaburi622.30816,6141,333,6231,122,6271,152,4012,143.1
Samut Prakan1,004.501,028,401 1,828,0441,223,3021,237,0471,820.6
Pathum Thani1,525.90677,649 1,326,6171,010,8981,048,665869.4
Samut Sakhon872.30466,281885,559499,098516,3921015.2
Nakhon Pathom2,168.30815,122942,560866,064880,716434.7
Greater Bangkok7,762.0010,159,21114,565,52010,396,83210,518,9071,876.64
source: http://www.citypopulation.de/php/thailand-admin.php (on NSO.go.th Census Data, 2010 figures subject to revision.)
  • Census 2010 explicitly counted Thais and those with legal permanent residency status where they resided during the count. Details here. This Census however failed to count long stay migrants and expats without legal permanent resident status, of which is estimated between "atleast 2 million"[2] to "no less than 3 million"[3] nationwide. Therefore, Greater Bangkok's actual population easily surpassed 15 million by 2010 census, and was possibly as high as 16 million.
  • Department of Provincial Affairs th:กรมการปกครอง Grommágaan Bpòkkrong registers Thai population. Millions live in Bangkok Region with upcountry registration, expats, migrants, those in refugee camps, and "native" ethnic tribes without Thai nationality not registered. Total registered population 64,076,033 some 1.4 million less than Census population a year earlier.[4] Thailand is still (as of 2013) trying to officially register migrant workers.[5]

Traffic

As of October 31, 2012, some 7,384,934 vehicles were registered in the metro area, roughly 1 vehicle for every two people.[6] To alleviate this congestion, massive railway development is ongoing, but its construction is causing large scale disturbance to major throughfares, the Bangkokian love affair with cars is causing high levels of air pollution and large oil import bills.

See also

Resources

References

Coordinates: 13°51′N 100°25′E / 13.850°N 100.417°E / 13.850; 100.417

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.