List of inner suburbs in the United States

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).


Charlotte, North Carolina

Concord

Fort Hill

. Davidson

Atlanta, Georgia

Baltimore, Maryland

Bay Area, California

San Francisco

San Jose

Oakland

Birmingham, Alabama

Boston, Massachusetts

Buffalo, New York

Chicago, Illinois

Illinois side

Indiana side

Cincinnati, Ohio

Ohio side

Northern Kentucky side

Cleveland, Ohio

Columbus, Ohio

Dayton, Ohio

Denver, Colorado

Detroit, Michigan

Dallas, Texas

Dallas

Fort Worth

Hartford, Connecticut

Houston, Texas

Indianapolis, Indiana

Kansas City, Missouri

Missouri side

Kansas side

Los Angeles, California

Louisville, Kentucky

Kentucky side

Indiana side

Madison, Wisconsin

Miami, Florida

Miami-Dade

Fort Lauderdale

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Nashville, Tennessee

New Orleans, Louisiana

New York City, New York

New York side

New Jersey side

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Omaha, Nebraska

Orlando, Florida

Peoria, Illinois

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania side

New Jersey side

Phoenix, Arizona

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Portland, Oregon

Oregon side

Washington side

Providence, Rhode Island

Puget Sound, Washington

Seattle

Tacoma

Rochester, New York

Salt Lake City, Utah

San Diego, California

Springfield, Illinois

St. Louis, Missouri

Missouri side

Illinois side

Tampa Bay Area, Florida

Hillsborough County (Tampa)

Pinellas County (St. Petersburg-Clearwater)

Twin Cities, Minnesota

Minneapolis

St. Paul

Washington, D.C.

Maryland

Virginia

See also

Notes

  1. Roseville could be considered an inner suburb of Minneapolis as it borders both cities, but primarily borders St. Paul.

References

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