this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2024
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I have to admit, I did a double-take at "Australia's biggest city" referring to Melbourne. But it does in fact appear to be correct, so long as you look at "significant urban areas", and not the "greater capital city statistical area" or "urban centre".
To be honest I'm not sure what each of these is supposed to mean. GCCSA is at least clear in that it's the SUA of the main city plus a few others (Central Coast and Bacchus Marsh & Gisborne, respectively), but what is SUA vs UC? Clearly neither is as limited as "city council area", but beyond that? 🤷♂️
Anyway, this is certainly not a problem unique to Melbourne. It's been quite a while since I've made it down there, but the perception I get is that yous have a lot better options for public transport than we do up in the sunshine state. And at the very least,
Is incredibly relatable here, too. It's a problem across the entire country, as well as in other anglosphere countries around the world. We desperately need a wide-spread cultural and political change when it comes to transport and city planning. That means more and more frequent public transport. More public transport routes that aren't solely designed to get into and out of the CBD. More and better active transport routes. Better zoning laws to enable more people to live closer to where they want to go. And it also necessitates not spending billions upon billions of dollars on road-widening to keep making cars more and more appealing.
This article was much better than I was expecting, honestly, touching on non-CBD routes, congestion charging, and building more in areas with pre-existing good public transport. But it was all so very surface-level. More articles like this, for Melbourne, for other Australian cities, and at the national level, is great. But even greater would be more articles that allow themselves to really delve in present a clear vision for a better future.
It overtook Sydney about a year ago when the ABS revised the statistical areas: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-65261720
Based on these new boundaries Melbourne's had a higher population than Sydney since 2018.
Conveniently, that article also answers one of my questions.
It's not super clear how Melton, with this definition, catapulted Melbourne ahead. My best guess is that there was one suburb needed to connect the rest of Melton into Melbourne which has only just reached the threshold, which allowed the entire urban centre of Melton to be added?
Even more interesting is how all of Geelong is excluded from Melbourne's count when Gosford's included in Sydney's count, despite neither place being continuously connected to the larger city, Geelong being closer to Melbourne than Gosford is to Sydney, and Geelong having just as large a proportion of daily commuters as Gosford.
The reality is that Melbourne's population outpaced Sydney a long time ago and the boundaries are only just starting to catch up.