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Portland metropolitan area

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The Portland metropolitan area is the urban area centered around Portland, Oregon and the Willamette River. It includes Multnomah County and most of Washington County, and western parts of Clackamas County, plus southern Clark County in Washington. From some perspectives it also extends into parts of Yamhill County, Oregon.

It is Oregon's largest urban center, with about 2 million people and about 550 to 600 sq. mi. of urbanized land area, and the state's hub for trade, transportation, and business. Most of the Portland metropolitan area is under the jurisdiction of Metro, a directly-elected regional government which, among other things, is responsible for land use planning in the region.

[edit] Cities and other communities

Major cities in the region in addition to Portland include Beaverton, Gresham, Hillsboro, and Vancouver, Washington. The area also includes the smaller cities of Clackamas, Damascus, Gladstone, King City, Lake Oswego, Milwaukie, Oregon City, Tigard, Tualatin, West Linn, Wilsonville, and Battle Ground, Washington.

It includes the unincorporated suburban communities of Aloha, Beavercreek, Dunthorpe, Garden Home, Raleigh Hills, and West Slope.


[edit] Metropolitan statistical area

The Portland–Vancouver–Beaverton Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), the 24th largest in the United States, has a population of 2,095,861 (2005 estimate). It consists of Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, and parts of Columbia and Yamhill counties in Oregon, as well as Clark County, Washington. The area includes Portland and the neighboring cities of Beaverton, Gresham, Hillsboro, Milwaukie, Lake Oswego, Oregon City, Fairview, Wood Village, Troutdale, Tualatin and Tigard, as well as Vancouver, Washington.

[edit] Transportation

Portland is where Interstate 84 ends at Interstate 5, both major highways in the Pacific Northwest. Other primary roads include Interstate 205, an eastern bypass of the urban core, U.S. Highway 26, which heads west and southeast, U.S. Highway 30, which goes to the northwest, and Oregon Highway 217, which connects US 26 with I-5 in the south, travelling through Beaverton. Both US 26 and US 30 go to the Oregon Coast. Also, Washington State Route 14 travels along the northern banks of the Columbia River from downtown Vancouver east to Camas and Washougal.

Transit service on the Oregon side is generally provided by TriMet and Clark County is served by C-TRAN.

[edit] External links

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