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Encyclopedia > Atlanta metro area

According to the 2000 census, the 28-county Atlanta, Georgia metropolitan area has a United States.


According to the ranking of world cities undertaken by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group & Network (GaWC) and based on the level of presence of global corporate service organisations, Atlanta is considered a gamma or minor world city.

Contents

Counties

Cities

Anchor city

Suburbs with 10,000 or more inhabitants

Suburbs with less than 10,000 inhabitants

Commerce

Transportation and communication

Metro Atlanta is served by six major interstate highway routes to and from the city. I-75 is the busiest and carries a great deal of truck traffic, running south-southeast to Macon and onward to Florida and northwest to Chattanooga (and I-575 to Canton). I-85 runs southwest to Montgomery (and I-185 to Columbus), and northeast to Greenville/Spartanburg (and I_985 to Gainesville). I-20 runs east to Augusta and Columbia, and west to Birmingham.


I-285 runs around the city in a circle, and is called the Perimeter. I-75/85 is joined through downtown Atlanta, called the Georgia 400 runs north to Alpharetta, then somewhat northeast to Dahlonega in the mountains.


MARTA operates rapid transit in Fulton and Dekalb counties, while Gwinnett, Cobb, and Clayton counties operate their own buses with no current rail transit. Plans are underway for commuter rail, though this is several years away yet.


The area has three telephone area codes. 404, which originally covered all of northern Georgia until 1992, now covers only inside the Perimeter (Interstate 285). In 1995, the suburbs were put into 770, and 678 was overlaid onto both in 1998, requiring mandatory ten-digit dialing even for local calls under FCC rules. A new area code will be added by 2004, however the 470 assigned for this may be changed as it is extremely confusing with both 404 and 770, and 478 in adjoing central Georgia. Cellphones, originally only 404, may now have any local area code regardless of where they were issued in the area.


Major fiber-optic lines and oil and natural gas pipelines cross the area, running from the Gulf coast, Texas, and Louisiana to the population centers of the northeastern U.S.


Retail centers

Atlanta is a city known in the South for its many shopping areas. The Atlanta area home to the South's largest shopping mall, the Mall of Georgia, which is located in nearby Gwinnett County.


The other larger shopping establishments in Metro Atlanta includes:

  • Arbor Place Mall
  • Cumberland Mall
  • Discover Mills, a large outlet shopping mall located in Gwinnett County
  • Greenbriar Mall
  • Gwinnett Place Mall
  • Lenox Square, a large 3-level shopping center that is home to some 250 retailers and restaurants that is located in Buckhead. The anchors of Lenox Square include Rich's-Macy's, Bloomingdales, and Neiman_Marcus. [1] (http://www.lenoxsquare.com/)
  • Mall at Stonecrest
  • Northlake Mall
  • North Pointe Mall
  • Perimeter Mall
  • Phipps Plaza, an upscale shopping center also located in Buckhead. This mall is considered Atlanta's most upscale shopping center with 100+ stores along with Parisian and Saks Fifth Avenue as anchors. [2] (http://www.phippsplaza.com/)
  • Shannon Mall
  • South DeKalb Mall
  • Southlake Mall
  • Town Center at Cobb

See also


Regions of Georgia
Colonial Coast | Metro Atlanta | Georgia Mountains Region | Historic South | Inland Empire | Southern Rivers
Largest Cities
Albany | Atlanta | Athens | Augusta | Columbus | Macon | Savannah
Counties of Georgia

Appling | Atkinson | Bacon | Baker | Baldwin | Banks | Barrow | Bartow | Ben Hill | Berrien | Bibb | Bleckley | Brantley | Brooks | Bryan | Bulloch | Burke | Butts | Calhoun | Camden | Candler | Carroll | Catoosa | Charlton | Chatham | Chattahoochee | Chattooga | Cherokee | Clarke | Clay | Clayton | Clinch | Cobb | Coffee | Colquitt | Columbia | Cook | Coweta | Crawford | Crisp | Dade | Dawson | Decatur | DeKalb | Dodge | Dooly | Dougherty | Douglas | Early | Echols | Effingham | Elbert | Emanuel | Evans | Fannin | Fayette | Floyd | Forsyth | Franklin | Fulton | Gilmer | Glascock | Glynn | Gordon | Grady | Greene | Gwinnett | Habersham | Hall | Hancock | Haralson | Harris | Hart | Heard | Henry | Houston | Irwin | Jackson | Jasper | Jeff Davis | Jefferson | Jenkins | Johnson | Jones | Lamar | Lanier | Laurens | Lee | Liberty | Lincoln | Long | Lowndes | Lumpkin | Macon | Madison | Marion | McDuffie | McIntosh | Meriwether | Miller | Mitchell | Monroe | Montgomery | Morgan | Murray | Muscogee | Newton | Oconee | Oglethorpe | Paulding | Peach | Pickens | Pierce | Pike | Polk | Pulaski | Putnam | Quitman | Rabun | Randolph | Richmond | Rockdale | Schley | Screven | Seminole | Spalding | Stephens | Stewart | Sumter | Talbot | Taliaferro | Tattnall | Taylor | Telfair | Terrell | Thomas | Tift | Toombs | Towns | Treutlen | Troup | Turner | Twiggs | Union | Upson | Walker | Walton | Ware | Warren | Washington | Wayne | Webster | Wheeler | White | Whitfield | Wilcox | Wilkes | Wilkinson | Worth



  Results from FactBites:
 
MSA Study No. 2: Atlanta Metro Area a Higher Ed Leader (243 words)
Higher Education in America’s Metropolitan Areas also shows that the Atlanta region is a national leader in higher education, consistently ranking in the top 10 metro areas in key measures of higher education activity.
Atlanta is rich with collegiate student life and learning, ranking sixth among the 60 MSAs studied in the total number of students attending degree-granting institutions.
Atlanta also is a focal point for higher education opportunity for African-Americans, ranking fourth in the number of African-American students enrolled.
Encyclopedia: Atlanta Metropolitan Area (8103 words)
A metropolitan area is a large population center consisting of a large city and its adjacent zone of influence, or of several neighboring cities or towns and adjoining areas, with one or more large cities serving as its hub or hubs.
The area sprawls across the low foothills of the Appalachian Mountains to the north and the piedmont to the south.
Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forest.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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