Skip to content
Category

Transborder agglomerations

page 1
Øresund Region
transnational region in Copenhagen, Denmark and Malmö, Sweden
Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area
Pearl River Delta metropolitan region
San Diego–Tijuana
international transborder agglomeration straddling the border of San Diego, United States and Tijuana, Mexico
Great Lakes Megalopolis
sum total of all major cities near the Great Lakes in some form
Donostia-San Sebastián metropolitan area
Metropolitan area in Spain
Greater Geneva
local Grouping of Transnational Cooperation
Indonesia–Malaysia–Singapore Growth Triangle
growth triangle between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore
Eurométropole Lille-Kortrijk-Tournai
French-Belgian Euroregion
Eurodistrict
A eurodistrict is a European administrative entity that contains urban agglomerations which lie across the border between two or more states. A eurodistrict offers a program for cooperation and integration of the towns or communes which it comprises: for example, improving transport links for people who live and work on different sides of the border.
Katowice-Ostrava metropolitan area
metropolitan area in southern Poland and northeastern Czech Republic
transborder agglomeration
urban area or conurbation extending into multiple countries
Detroit-Windsor
The Detroit–Windsor region is an international transborder agglomeration named for the American city of Detroit, Michigan, the Canadian city of Windsor, Ontario, and the Detroit River, which separates them. The Detroit–Windsor area acts as a critical commercial link straddling the Canada–United States border and has a total population of 5,976,595. It is North America's largest cross-border conurbation.