Greater
Milwaukee has had a long and contentious debate about public transit, with one
common argument against investing in rapid transit being that the region doesn't have the population density to support it. A recent study from
the U.S. Census Bureau, however, may be cause for reexamining that contention. It
finds Milwaukee among the densest metropolitan areas in the U.S., with greater
population density than many of the nation’s most populous metros, including Atlanta,
Houston, and Seattle.
In 2010, the
Milwaukee metropolitan area – comprised of Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Washington, and
Waukesha counties – ranked 15th in population density among the 102 metro
areas in the U.S. with populations over 500,000, with a density of 5,258
persons per square mile. Milwaukee was second only to Chicago among Midwest
metros. Notably, the Milwaukee area’s density declined slightly between 2000
and 2010, by 3.6%. This downtick followed a national trend, however, as 33 of
the nation’s 50 largest metro areas saw their densities decline during that
period. The complete data set can be found here.
Rather than
using the traditional method of determining population density, which involves
simply dividing total land area by total population, the Census Bureau study used
“weighted density,” which averages the densities of each census tract in a
metro area while giving each tract a relative weight based on its share of the
metro’s total population. Using this methodology, for example, if 75% of a given
metro area’s population lives in low-density suburbs, that metro will have a
lower weighted density than another metro area of the same size and with the
same population where 75% of residents live in medium- or high-density urban
neighborhoods.
A
frequently-cited example illustrating why researchers are converting to this
new method of determining population density is the fact that under the
traditional definition, the Los Angeles metro area has a higher density than
the New York metro area, which is counterintuitive to anyone who has visited
both places. Using weighted density, the New York metro is more than twice as
dense as L.A., because the typical New Yorker lives in a denser neighborhood
than the typical Angeleno.
While metro
Milwaukee is not as dense as New York or Chicago, it is denser than many metro
areas considered to have admirable public transit systems, including Seattle
and Portland. Milwaukee also is denser than many others that have made recent
investments in rapid transit, such as Minneapolis and Phoenix with their
relatively new light rail systems, and Cleveland and Kansas City, where bus
rapid transit (BRT) systems recently have been developed.
Rapid transit may come back into Greater
Milwaukee’s infrastructure planning at some point in the future. While many
factors impact the success of a rapid transit system, we now have a clearer
understanding of our population density and how it compares with other metro areas
around the country.
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