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Urban areas in Sweden

From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.

(Redirected from Tätort)

The terminology on urban areas in Sweden is notoriously hard to translate to people outside of Scandinavia because they are unique and because some terms are only used for statistical purposes and are not used by laymen. Basically, each of the 26 counties of Sweden is divided into several municipalities (Kommuner). The classifications of municipalities differ. Often towns that have had city rights at one time or another get to be the seat of a municipality and form its name. The municipality consists of the town itself and its adjecent surroundings. Inside the municipality are urban areas of different sizes and the number of inhabitants decide what its proper definition is.

Contents

Definitions

  • tätort is the central concept, and one that is actually commonly agreed on. A tätort is any village, town, or city with a population of at least 200 for which the contiguous built-up area meet the criterion that houses are not more than 200 meters apart when discounting rivers, parks, roads, etc. A tätort may be a conurbation of several towns. Tätort is sometimes translated to "urban area", although below the translation "non-rural area" is preferred.
  • småort is a concept, lesser known outside of the field of statistics, for settlements just below the limit to be defined as tätort. It is defined as a contiguous built-up area with no more than 150 meters between houses and 50–199 inhabitants. In a bureaucratic mindset, a småort is rural. In a rural mindset, this is not neccessarily so.
  • fritidshusområde is in statistical context an area with less than 50 permanent inhabitants but at least 50 houses (in practice: weekend cottages/summer houses) meeting the criterion that they are not more than 150 metres apart. About a third of Sweden's "second homes" are located in such areas. The term belongs also to everyday usage, although less strictly defined, and with somewhat negative connotations.
  • by is the standard term for village and hamlet, but may in some contexts, notably for Scania, be used for suburbs and towns of considerable size. If at all used in the context of statistics, it must be assumed that the size of a by is smaller than that of a småort. (NB! Not to be confused with the same word in Danish and Norwegian that means town/city.)
  • huvudort is rarely used for seats of local government, i.e. specifically a municipal seat.
  • samhälle is a much used concept whose concrete meaning is a locality in size and importance intermediary between that of a town and a that of a village. Confusingly, the term is also used abstractly to mean "society", "community", or even "state". (Compare: Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft.) A samhälle does not neccessarily meet the criteria for tätort — not even for småort.
  • municipalsamhälle is a dated term no longer used outside of historical contexts. Its meaning was in effect similar to that of centralort, but governmentally applied only to localities that weren't towns or market towns.
  • köping is a term that since 1971 is abolished in governmental and statistical contexts, and only rarely kept in use by laymen, although it has survived as part of the names of several towns. The meaning was a locality with an intermediary legal status below that of a town, i.e. a market town.
  • stad is the Swedish term for towns and cities. In a context of statistics, it may be restricted to towns with a population greater than 10,000, which is a restriction counter-intuitive to most Swedes. Judicially, the term is obsolete since 1971, but the term is still in common use.
  • förstad and förort are much used terms for suburb.
  • storstad is the nearest translation for the concept of city. There exists no specific criterion for its definition, but many Swedes would agree that a storstad has to be the center of a metropolitan area. It ought to be kept in mind that a distinction between town and city is really not made in Swedish. "Storstad" means literally "large town". Statistics Sweden count Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö as "storstad".

The municipalities of Sweden are administrative units containing rural, suburban and urban areas. In practice, most references in Sweden are to municipalities, not specifically to towns or cities, which complicates international comparisons.

When comparing the population of different cities, the urban area ("tätort") population is to prefer for the population of the municipality. The population of e.g. Stockholm should be accounted as ~1.2 million rather than the ~750,000 of the municipality, and Lund rather ~75,000 than ~100,000.

Statistics

Data are computed by Statistics Sweden every five years. The latest data are as of December 31, 2000. Then the total population of the non-rural areas in Sweden was 7,464,861 on an area of 5,210.373 km&sup2, which gives an average population density of 1,433/km².

Comparative figures for the entire country was: 8,882,792/410,335.40 km² = 22/km².

  • 84% of the Swedish population lives in non-rural areas (i.e. in tätorts).
  • 50% lives in the 64 largest urban areas.
  • A third lives in the 15 largest urban areas, and
  • A quarter lives in the 5 largest.
  • The largest and most populous urban area is Stockholm.


The largest urban areas

Urban area Area¹ Population Density² County
Stockholm UA375.249 1,212,1963,230Stockholm
Gothenburg UA198.778 495,8492,494Västra Götaland
Malmö UA69.335 248,5203,584Skåne
Uppsala47.709124,0362,600Uppsala
Västerås51.165102,5482,004Västmanland
Örebro42.61995,3542,237Örebro
Linköping41.18394,2482,253Östergötland
Helsingborg36.90387,9142,382Skåne
Norrköping34.54582,7442,395Östergötland
Jönköping44.18181,7321,842Jönköping
Lund24.57873,8403,004Skåne
Umeå33.68670,9552,106Västerbotten
Gävle41.57767,8561,632Gävleborg
Borås29.43361,9292,104Västra Götaland
Södertälje24.65659,3422,407Stockholm
Eskilstuna29.62757,8671,953Södermanland
Täby25.77857,8342,244Stockholm
Karlstad29.61856,4801,907Värmland
Halmstad32.33653,4871,654Halland
Växjö28.50651.7901,817Kronoberg

remarks
  1. km²
  2. Population per km²

The most densely populated areas

tätort Area Population Density County remarks
Fisksätra 1.01 7,185 7,097Stockholm (1)
Malmö UA 69.34 248,520 3,584 Skåne  
Stockholm UA 375.25 1,212,196 3,230 Stockholm  
Sjöberg 1.37 4,219 3,084 Stockholm (1)
Vaxholm 1.60 4,887 3,046 Stockholm  
Märsta (at Sigtuna) 7.29 22,121 3,036 Stockholm  
Lund 24.58 73,840 3,004 Skåne  
Oxie 3.18 9,242 2,910 Skåne (2)
Älta 3.27 9,165 2,803 Stockholm (1)
Burlövs egnahem 0.21 555 2,697 Skåne (2)

remarks
  1. suburb of Stockholm
  2. suburb of Malmö

Towns divided by municipality borders

Some urban areas are divided by municipal borders. 15 of these are municipal seats, though only two urban areas works as seats of several municipalities: Stockholm and Gothenburg. These include:

See also

External links

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Tätort (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tätort) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tätort&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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