Chicago metropolitan area


The Chicago metropolitan area, or Chicagoland, is the metropolitan area of Chicago and its suburbs, covering 14 counties in the U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin. With an estimated 2019 CSA population of roughly 9.83 million people, and a MSA population of 9.46 million people, it is the third largest metropolitan area in the United States.
The Chicago metropolitan area has one of the world's largest and most diversified economies, with more than six million full and part-time employees, and generating an annual gross regional product of $689 billion in 2018. The region is home to more than 400 major corporate headquarters, including 31 in the Fortune 500. For six consecutive years, Chicagoland was ranked the nation's top metropolitan area for corporate relocations. The Chicago area is home to a number of the nation's leading universities including The University of Chicago, Northwestern University, University of Illinois at Chicago, DePaul University, and Loyola University.
There are several definitions of the area, including the areas defined by the United States Office of Management and Budget as the Chicago–Naperville-Elgin IL–IN–WI Metropolitan Statistical Area and the slightly larger Combined Statistical Area, and the area under the jurisdiction of the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning .

Definitions

Metropolitan statistical area

The Chicago Metropolitan Statistical Area was originally designated by the United States Census Bureau in 1950. It comprised the Illinois counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and Will, along with Lake County in Indiana. As surrounding counties saw an increase in their population densities and the number of their residents employed within Cook County, they met Census criteria to be added to the MSA. The Chicago MSA, now defined as the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI Metropolitan Statistical Area, is the third largest MSA by population in the United States. The 2015 census estimate for the MSA was 9,532,569, a decline from 9,543,893 in the 2014 census estimate. This loss of population has been attributed to taxes, political issues, weather, and other factors; however, a negative net migration rate statewide has been shown to be a result of poor gross in-migration, rather than an unusually high rate of gross out-migration.
The Chicago MSA is further subdivided by state boundaries into the Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL Metropolitan Division, corresponding roughly to the CMAP region; the Gary, IN Metropolitan Division consisting of the Indiana counties of Lake and Porter, as well as two surrounding counties; and the Lake County-Kenosha County, IL-WI Metropolitan Division.
A breakdown of the 2009 estimated populations of the three Metropolitan Divisions of the MSA are as follows:
The OMB also defines a slightly larger region as a Combined Statistical Area. The Chicago–Naperville, IL–IN–WI Combined Statistical Area combines the metropolitan areas of Chicago, Michigan City, and Kankakee. This area represents the extent of the labor market pool for the entire region. The CSA has a population of 9,825,325.

United Nations' Chicago urban agglomeration

The Chicago urban agglomeration, according to the United Nations World Urbanization Prospects report, lists a population of 8,864,000. The term "urban agglomeration" refers to the population contained within the contours of a contiguous territory inhabited at urban density levels. It usually incorporates the population in a city, plus that in the contiguous urban, or built-up area.

Chicagoland

Chicagoland is an informal name for the Chicago metropolitan area. The term Chicagoland has no official definition, and the region is often considered to include areas beyond the corresponding MSA, as well as portions of the greater CSA.
Colonel Robert R. McCormick, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune, usually gets credit for placing the term in common use. McCormick's conception of Chicagoland stretched all the way to nearby parts of four states. The first usage was in the Tribunes July 27, 1926 front page headline, "Chicagoland's Shrines: A Tour of Discoveries", for an article by reporter James O'Donnell Bennett. He stated that Chicagoland comprised everything in a radius in every direction and reported on many different places in the area. The Tribune was the dominant newspaper in a vast area stretching to the west of the city, and that hinterland was closely tied to the metropolis by rail lines and commercial links.
Today, the
Chicago Tribune
s usage includes the city of Chicago, the rest of Cook County, eight nearby Illinois counties, and the two Indiana counties of Lake and Porter. Illinois Department of Tourism literature uses Chicagoland for suburbs in Cook, Lake, DuPage, Kane, and Will counties, treating the city separately. The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce defines it as all of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will counties.
In addition, company marketing programs such as Construction Data Company's "Chicago and Vicinity" region and the Chicago Automobile Trade Association's "Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana" advertising campaign are directed at the MSA itself, as well as LaSalle, Winnebago, Boone, and Ogle counties in Illinois, in addition to Jasper, Newton, and La Porte counties in Indiana and Kenosha, Racine, and Walworth counties in Wisconsin, and even as far northeast as Berrien County, Michigan. The region is part of the Great Lakes Megalopolis, containing an estimated 54 million people.

Collar counties

The term "collar counties" is a colloquialism for the five counties of Illinois that border Chicago's Cook County. After Cook County, they are also the next five most populous counties in the state. According to the Encyclopedia of Chicago, there is no specifically known origin of the phrase, but it has been commonly used among policy makers, urban planners, and in the media. However, it also notes that as growth has spread beyond these counties, it may have lost some of its usefulness.

Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning

Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning is an Illinois state agency responsible for transportation infrastructure, land use, and long-term economic development planning for the areas under its jurisdiction within Illinois. The planning area has a population of over 8 million, which includes the following locations in Illinois:
The city of Chicago lies in the Chicago Plain, a flat and broad area characterized by little topographical relief. The few low hills are sand ridges. North of the Chicago Plain, steep bluffs and ravines run alongside Lake Michigan.
Along the southern shore of the Chicago Plain, sand dunes run alongside the lake. The tallest dunes reach up to near and are found in Indiana Dunes National Park. Surrounding the low plain are bands of moraines in the south and west suburbs. These areas are higher and hillier than the Chicago Plain. A continental divide, separating the Mississippi River watershed from that of the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River, runs through the Chicago area.
A 2012 survey of the urban trees and forests in the seven county Illinois section of the Chicago area found that 21% of the land is covered by the tree and shrub canopy, made up of about 157,142,000 trees. The five most common tree species are buckthorn, green ash, boxelder, black cherry, and American elm. These resources perform important functions in carbon storage, water recycling, and energy saving.

Demographics

As of the 2010 Census, the metropolitan area had a population of 9,729,825. The population density was 1,318 per square mile.
The racial makeup was 52.8% Non-Latino White, 22.1% were Latino, 16.7% were Non-Latino African Americans, and 6.4% were Asian. Other ethnic groups such as Native Americans and Pacific Islanders made up just 2.0% of the population.
The suburbs, surrounded by easily annexed flat ground, have been expanding at a tremendous rate since the early 1960s. Aurora, Elgin, Joliet, and Naperville are noteworthy for being four of the few boomburbs outside the Sun Belt, West Coast and Mountain States regions, and exurban Kendall County ranked as the fastest-growing county in the United States between the years 2000 and 2007.
Settlement patterns in the Chicago metropolitan area tend to follow those in the city proper: the northern suburbs along the shore of Lake Michigan are comparatively affluent, while the southern suburbs are less so, with lower median incomes and a lower cost of living. However, there is a major exception to this. While Chicago's West Side is the poorest section of the city, the western and northwestern suburbs contain many affluent areas. According to the 2000 Census, DuPage County had the highest median household income of any county in the Midwestern United States.
According to the 2000 U.S. Census, poverty rates of the largest counties from least poverty to most are as follows: McHenry 3.70%, Dupage 5.9%, Will 6.7%, Lake 6.9%, Kane 7.4%, Cook 14.5%.
In an in-depth historical analysis, Keating examined the origins of 233 settlements that by 1900 had become suburbs or city neighborhoods of the Chicago metropolitan area. The settlements began as farm centers, industrial towns, residential railroad suburbs, and recreational/institutional centers. Although relations between the different settlement types were at times contentious, there also was cooperation in such undertakings as the construction of high schools.

Population

As the Chicago metropolitan area has grown, more counties have been partly or totally assimilated with the taking of each decennial census.
Census Area2010 Census2000 Census1990 Census1980 Census1970 Census1960 Census1950 Census
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WIMSA9,461,1059,098,3168,065,6337,869,5427,612,3146,794,4615,495,364
Cook County, IllinoisMSA5,194,6755,376,7415,105,0675,253,6555,492,3695,129,7254,508,792
DeKalb County, IllinoisMSA105,16088,96977,93274,62471,65451,71440,781
DuPage County, IllinoisMSA916,924904,161781,666658,835491,882313,459154,599
Grundy County, IllinoisMSA50,06337,53532,33730,58226,53522,35019,217
Kane County, IllinoisMSA515,269404,119317,471278,405251,005208,246150,388
Kendall County, IllinoisMSA114,73654,54439,41337,20226,37417,54012,115
McHenry County, IllinoisMSA308,760260,077183,241147,897111,55584,21050,656
Will County, IllinoisMSA677,560502,266357,313324,460249,498191,617134,336
Jasper County, IndianaMSA33,47830,04324,96026,13820,42918,84217,031
Lake County, IndianaMSA496,005484,564475,594522,965546,253513,269368,152
Newton County, IndianaMSA14,24414,56613,55114,84411,60611,50211,006
Porter County, IndianaMSA164,343146,798128,932119,81687,11460,27940,076
Lake County, IllinoisMSA703,462644,356516,418440,372382,638293,656179,097
Kenosha County, WisconsinMSA166,426149,577128,181123,137117,917100,61575,238
Kankakee County, IllinoisCSA113,449103,83396,255102,92697,25092,06373,524
LaPorte County, IndianaCSA111,467110,106107,066108,632105,34295,11176,808
Chicago- Naperville- Joliet, IL-IN-WICSA9,686,0219,312,2558,385,3978,264,4908,089,4217,204,1985,911,816

Counties highlighted in gray were not included in the MSA for that census.
The CSA totals in blue are the totals of all the counties listed above, regardless of whether they were included in the Chicago Combined Statistical Area at the time.

Principal municipalities

Over 1,000,000 population

Within the boundary of the 16-county Chicago Consolidated Statistical Area lies the Chicago urban area, as well as 27 smaller urban areas and clusters. Smallest gap indicates the shortest distance between the given urban area or cluster and the Chicago urban area.
File:Chicagoland Townships grays.PNG|thumb|315px|right|The extent of the 16-county Chicago CSA and the 16 counties that share a border with the Chicago CSA, with counties divided into Minor Civil Divisions. In Illinois and Indiana, townships are intermediate between counties and municipalities Land area
Smallest gap
1Chicago-Aurora-Elgin-Joliet-Waukegan, IL-INUA8,307,9045,498.1n/a2Round Lake Beach-McHenry-Grayslake, IL-WI^ †UA226,848344.923Kenosha, WI †UA110,942109.214Michigan City-LaPorte, IN-MI^^ †UA66,19986.135Kankakee-Bradley-Bourbonnais, ILUA65,07371.5>106DeKalb-Sycamore, ILUA55,80546.3>107Woodstock, IL †UC20,21921.148Morris, ILUC13,92719.3>109Sandwich, IL^^^UC12,24823.9>1010Braidwood-Coal City, ILUC11,60719.5>1011Harvard, ILUC8,57513.3>1012Lakes of the Four Seasons, IN †UC8,45012.5413Lowell, INUC7,91415.8>1014Wilmington, ILUC7,10720.8>1015Manteno, ILUC7,1069.4>1016Marengo, ILUC6,8548.6>1017Rensselaer, INUC6,09610.9>1018Plano, IL †UC5,9116.5319Genoa, ILUC5,1375.5>1020Genoa City, WI-IL^^^^ †UC5,12612.5>1021Westville, INUC5,0774.4>1022Hebron, INUC4,15011.7>1023Momence, ILUC3,7119.7>1024Peotone, IL †UC3,3583.5925Wonder Lake, IL †UC2,7982.0526Monee, IL †UC2,7873.7327Union Township, Porter County, IN †UC2,5934.9128Hampshire, IL †UC2,5912.06
The formerly distinct urban areas of Aurora, Elgin, Joliet, and Waukegan were absorbed into the Chicago UA as of the 2000 census.
† These urban areas and urban clusters are expected to be joined to the Chicago Urban Area by the next census in 2010.
^ The Round Lake Beach-McHenry-Grayslake, IL-WI UA extends into Walworth County, WI, which lies in the Milwaukee CSA.
^^ The Michigan City-LaPorte, IN-MI UA extends into Berrien County, MI, which lies outside the Chicago CSA.
^^^ The Sandwich, IL UC extends into LaSalle County, IL, which lies outside the Chicago CSA.
^^^^ The Genoa City, WI-IL UC extends into Walworth County, WI, which lies in the Milwaukee CSA.

Economy

The Chicago metropolitan area is home to the corporate headquarters of 57 Fortune 1000 companies, including AbbVie Inc., Allstate, Boeing, Caterpillar Inc., Kraft Heinz, McDonald's, Mondelez International, Motorola, United Airlines, Walgreens, and more. The Chicago area also headquarters a wide variety of global financial institutions including Citadel LLC, Discover Financial Services, Morningstar, Inc., CNA Financial, and more. Chicago is home to the largest futures exchange in the world, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. In March 2008, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange announced its acquisition of NYMEX Holdings Inc, the parent company of the New York Mercantile Exchange and Commodity Exchange. CME'S acquisition of NYMEX was completed in August 2008.
A key piece of infrastructure for several generations was the Union Stock Yards of Chicago, which from 1865 until 1971 penned and slaughtered millions of cattle and hogs into standardized cuts of beef and pork. This prompted poet Carl Sandburg to describe Chicago as the "Hog Butcher for the World".
The Chicago area, meanwhile, began to produce significant quantities of telecommunications gear, electronics, steel, crude oil derivatives, automobiles, and industrial capital goods.
By the early 2000s, Illinois' economy had moved toward a dependence on high-value-added services, such as financial trading, higher education, logistics, and health care. In some cases, these services clustered around institutions that hearkened back to Illinois's earlier economies. For example, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, a trading exchange for global derivatives, had begun its life as an agricultural futures market.
In 2007, the area ranked first among U.S. metro areas in the number of new and expanded corporate facilities. It ranked third in 2008, behind the Houston–Sugar Land–Baytown and Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan areas, and ranked second behind the New York metropolitan area in 2009.
The Wall Street Journal summarized the Chicago area's economy in November 2006 with the comment that "Chicago has survived by repeatedly reinventing itself."

Transportation

Major airports

Commercial freight

Chicago has been at the center of the United States' railroad network since the 19th century. Almost all Class I railroads serve the area, the most in North America.

Passenger

Interstates

In addition to the Chicago Loop, the metro area is home to a few important subregional corridors of commercial activities. Among them are:

Sports

Listing of the professional sports teams in the Chicago metropolitan area
Major league professional teams:
Other professional teams:
The Chicagoland Speedway oval track has hosted NASCAR Cup Series and IndyCar Series races.
The Chicago Marathon is one of the World Marathon Majors.
The Western Open and BMW Championship are PGA Tour tournaments that have been held primarily at golf courses near Chicago.
NCAA Division I College Sports Teams:
The two main newspapers are the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Sun-Times. Local television channels broadcasting to the Chicago market include WBBM-TV 2, WMAQ-TV 5, WLS-TV 7, WGN-TV 9, WTTW 11, MeTV 23, WCIU 26, WFLD 32, WCPX-TV 38, WSNS-TV 44, WPWR-TV 50, and WJYS-TV 62. CLTV is a 24/7 local news provider available only to cable subscribers.
Radio stations serving the area include: WBEZ, WMBI, WLS, and WSCR.

Education

Elementary and secondary education within the Chicago metropolitan area is provided by dozens of different school districts, of which by far the largest is the Chicago Public Schools with 400,000 students. Numerous private and religious school systems are also found in the region, as well as a growing number of charter schools. Racial inequalities in education in the region remain widespread, often breaking along district boundaries; for instance, educational prospects vary widely for students in the Chicago Public Schools compared to those in some neighboring suburban schools.
Historically, the Chicago metropolitan area has been at the center of a number of national educational movements, from the free-flowing Winnetka Plan to the regimented Taylorism of the Gary Plan. In higher education, University of Chicago founder William Rainey Harper was a leading early advocate of the junior college movement; Joliet Junior College is the nation's oldest continuously-operating junior college today. Later U of C president Robert Maynard Hutchins was central to the Great Books movement, and programs of dialogic education arising from that legacy can be found today at the U of C, at Shimer College, and in the City Colleges of Chicago and Oakton Community College in the Northwest suburbs.

Area codes

From 1947 until 1988, the Illinois portion of the Chicago metro area was served by a single area code, 312, which abutted the 815 area code. In 1988 the 708 area code was introduced and the 312 area code became exclusive to the city of Chicago.
It became common to call suburbanites "708'ers", in reference to their area code.
The 708 area code was partitioned in 1996 into three area codes, serving different portions of the metro area: 630, 708, and 847.
At the same time that the 708 area code was running out of phone numbers, the 312 area code in Chicago was also exhausting its supply of available numbers. As a result, the city of Chicago was divided into two area codes, 312 and 773. Rather than divide the city by a north–south area code, the central business district retained the 312 area code, while the remainder of the city took the new 773 code.
In 2002, the 847 area code was supplemented with the overlay area code 224. In February 2007, the 815 area code was supplemented with the overlay area code 779. In October 2007, the overlay area code 331 was implemented to supplement the 630 area with additional numbers.
Plans are in place for overlay codes in the 708, 773, and 312 regions as those area codes become exhausted in the future.