The New Orleans Metropolitan Area, consisting of the Greater New Orleans region and three addtional parishes which share the perimeter of Lake Ponchartrain, is the largest metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Louisiana, centered around the city of New Orleans. The U.S. Census official designation of the area as of the 2003 definition is New Orleans–Metairie–Kenner MSA with a population of 1.3 million in seven parishes of southeastern Louisiana.*
The area was affected by Hurricane Katrina in late August of 2005, with effects ranging from moderate to devastating in various portions of the metropolitan area. As reconstruction continues, residents continue to gradually return. At the end of December, 2005, it was estimated that the current population of the New Orleans metro area was approximately 900,000 to 950,000. As of June 2006, most population estimates put Greater New Orleans' population at approximately 1.2 million.
Of those, four comprise the Greater New Orleans region, based on the state of Louisiana historical and economic regions *:
Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and Saint Bernard.
East Bank
The "East Bank" is composed of the majority of the City of New Orleans and the most densely populated portion of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, as well as many of the region's major suburbs. These suburbs include Metairie, Kenner, Jefferson, and Harahan on the upstream side of the city.
Further down the Mississippi River are the suburbs of Arabi, Chalmette, Meraux, Pointe a la Hache, and Violet. All of St. Bernard Parish and the eastern portion of Plaquemines Parish are located east of the river.
West Bank
The West Bank includes the Jefferson Parish communities of Gretna, Terrytown, Harvey, Marrero, Westwego, Lafitte, Estelle, Bridge City, Waggaman and Avondale. The western portion of Plaquemines Parish is also located here along with Belle Chasse, connected to the other suburbs by the Belle Chase Highway. The New Orleans communities of Algiers, Aurora Gardens, Cutoff, Stanton, and Tall Timbers, are located across the Mississippi River from the Central Business District (CBD) on the West Bank, but have long maintained their separate entities.
Lower Mississippi River Delta
The Lower Mississippi River Delta includes the eastern portion of St. Bernard Parish, home of the Isleños, and the southern portions of Jefferson Parish and Plaquemines Parish. It includes towns of Grand Isle and Port Sulphur.
Since Louisiana is under constant threat from hurricanes, the Louisiana State Police are prepared to enact a contraflow lane reversal program in order to evacuate the metropolitan area as quickly as possible.
Geography of Louisiana | Greater New Orleans | Metropolitan areas of the United States | Greater New Orleans
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"New Orleans metropolitan area".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world