Urban agglomeration

The Greater Tokyo Area, the world's second-largest urban agglomeration, with 38.4 million people.
An example of a bi-national urban agglomeration is the San Diego-Tijuana metropolitan area, creating a trans-border conurbation between the western United States and Mexico, respectively.

In the study of human settlements, an urban agglomeration is an extended city or town area comprising the built-up area of a central place (usually a municipality) and any suburbs linked by continuous urban area. INSEE, the French Statistical Institute, uses the term unité urbaine, which means continuous urbanized area. However, because of differences in definitions of what does and does not constitute an "agglomeration", as well as variations and limitations in statistical or geographical methodology, it can be problematic to compare different agglomerations around the world. It may not be clear, for instance, whether an area should be considered to be a satellite and part of an agglomeration, or a distinct entity in itself.

The term agglomeration is also linked to conurbation, which is a more specific term for large urban clusters where the built-up zones of influence of distinct cities or towns are connected by continuous built-up development (EssenDortmund and others in the Rhine-Ruhr district), even in different regions, states or countries, (LilleKortrijk in France and Belgium). Each city or town in a conurbation may nevertheless continue to act as an independent focus for a substantial part of the area.

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