List of inner suburbs in the United States

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In the United States, inner suburbs (sometimes known as "first-ring" suburbs) are the older, more densely populated communities of a metropolitan area with histories that significantly predate those of their suburban or exurban counterparts. Most inner suburbs share a common border with the principal city of the metropolitan area and developed along railroad or streetcar lines radiating from the principal city (or at ferry termini, if at water borders).

Atlanta, Georgia[edit]

Austin, Texas[edit]

Baltimore, Maryland[edit]

Baton Rouge, Louisiana[edit]

Bay Area, California[edit]

San Francisco[edit]

San Jose[edit]

Oakland[edit]

Birmingham, Alabama[edit]

Boston, Massachusetts[edit]

Buffalo, New York[edit]

Burlington, Vermont[edit]

Chattanooga, Tennessee[edit]

Tennessee side[edit]

Georgia Side[edit]

Chicago, Illinois[edit]

Illinois side[edit]

Indiana side[edit]

Cincinnati, Ohio[edit]

Ohio side[edit]

Northern Kentucky side[edit]

Cleveland/Akron, Ohio[edit]

Cleveland[edit]

Akron[edit]

Columbus, Ohio[edit]

Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas[edit]

Dallas[edit]

Fort Worth[edit]

Dayton, Ohio[edit]

Denver, Colorado[edit]

Detroit, Michigan[edit]

Grand Rapids, Michigan[edit]

Hartford, Connecticut[edit]

Houston, Texas[edit]

Indianapolis, Indiana[edit]

Kansas City, Missouri[edit]

Missouri side[edit]

Kansas side[edit]

Little Rock, Arkansas[edit]

Los Angeles, California[edit]

Louisville, Kentucky[edit]

Kentucky side[edit]

Indiana side[edit]

Madison, Wisconsin[edit]

Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, Florida[edit]

Milwaukee, Wisconsin[edit]

Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota[edit]

Minneapolis[edit]

St. Paul[edit]

Nashville, Tennessee[edit]

New Orleans, Louisiana[edit]

New York City, New York[edit]

New York side[edit]

New Jersey side[edit]

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma[edit]

Omaha, Nebraska[edit]

Orlando, Florida[edit]

Peoria, Illinois[edit]

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[edit]

Pennsylvania side[edit]

New Jersey side[edit]

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[edit]

Portland, Oregon[edit]

Oregon side[edit]

Washington side[edit]

Providence, Rhode Island[edit]

Puget Sound, Washington[edit]

Seattle[edit]

Tacoma[edit]

Rochester, New York[edit]

Salt Lake City, Utah[edit]

San Antonio, Texas[edit]

San Diego, California[edit]

Shreveport, Louisiana[edit]

South Central Pennsylvania[edit]

Harrisburg[edit]

York[edit]

Springfield, Illinois[edit]

St. Louis, Missouri[edit]

Missouri side[edit]

Illinois side[edit]

Stamford, Connecticut[edit]

Washington, D.C.[edit]

Maryland[edit]

Virginia[edit]

{{columns-list|colwidth=15em|

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Lauderdale borders both Minneapolis and Saint Paul.
  2. ^ Roseville could be considered an inner suburb of Minneapolis as it borders both cities, but primarily borders St. Paul.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sorry Boston, Google Fiber goes to Kansas". Boston.com. 2011-03-30. Retrieved 2012-05-28. [dead link]