London's population high: Top metropolis facts

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,400
1,667
113
According to the Greater London Authority (GLA), London's population has reached 8.6 million, larger than New York City.

The vast metropolis is already Europe's largest city and the 6th richest place on Earth and its population is expected to keep growing, with it expected to top 10 million within the next 15 years.

Here are some key facts about England and the UK's capital:


London's population high: Top metropolis facts


By Duncan Smith
BBC News
2 February 2015


At 8.6 million, and bigger than New York City, London's population has increased by 12% since 2001. It is expected to top 10 million within the next 15 years


London's population has hit 8.6m people, according to the Greater London Authority. The metropolis is already Europe's largest city and the 6th richest place on Earth. Here are some key facts about the capital.




1. Fastest growing borough


Tower Hamlets in east London is expected to see the fastest growth according to the Greater London Authority's (GLA) figures.

Between 2015 and 2039 its population is forecast to grow by 101,000. The borough of Newham will see predicted growth of 91,000 between 2015 and 2039, followed by Barnet, which expects to see growth of 76,000 between 2015-2039.


Towering numbers: The borough of Tower Hamlets has the fastest growing population




2. Largest growth

Hillingdon is the borough projected to see the largest growth. In 1939 there were 159,000 residents. By 2039 there will be 316,000 people living there - a rise of 82%. Havering closely follows with an increase of 80%. In 1939 there were 139,000 residents but by 2039 there will be 291,000 people living there.


Hillingdon, in the far west, is the borough projected to see the largest growth




3. Water, water everywhere

To cope with 8.6m Londoners, Thames Water has 10,000 miles of pipes under the city and deals with 4.4bn litres of wastewater per day. The company reports that Londoners use 10% more water a day than anywhere else in the UK.


The Victorian sewage system under London is being updated to cope

London's sewerage network was built following a series of outbreaks of cholera that killed 40,000 people in the first half of the 19th Century - the Victorians believed the disease was contracted through airborne "miasma" due to sewage in the open air.

The sewers overflow on a weekly basis, flushing 39m tonnes of raw sewage straight into the Thames each year. To cope with the growing population a £4.2bn, 15-mile (25km) long "super sewer" - officially known as the Thames Tideway Tunnel - should be operational by 2023.



4. Buses, trains and automobiles

The capital's masses need to get around and London Underground set new historic records for passenger numbers at the end of last year - a record 4.725m in one day during November, beating the 4.5m recorded during the London 2012 Games. London's red buses are now dealing with 6.25m passenger journeys every day, the highest demand since the late 1950s according to Transport for London.


There are 6.25m people on buses in London each DAY

Meanwhile the London Drivers Association reports there are 24,500 cabbies picking-up and dropping-off across the city.



5. The decline and rise of inner London

The GLA figures show inner London's population dropped between the 1940s and late 1980s. In Westminster, the population stood at 347,000 in 1939 but fell to 172, 000 by 1988. In 2011 it increased again to 219,000. Tower Hamlets, meanwhile, fell from 419,000 in 1939 to 159,000 in 1988. However, by 2011 it had shot up again to 254,000. The overall inner London population was 4.4m in 1939, had declined to 2.5m by 1988 but returned to 3.2m by 2011.


Queues for London buses during a Tube strike in 1939

The post-1939 decline in London's population has been attributed in part to the Blitz and evacuations during World War 2, and the construction of new towns that followed.




6. London's packed classrooms

London, unlike anywhere else in the country, is a graduate economy. According to the Office for National Statistics, 60% of the working-age population in inner London has a degree.


More than 80% of children in inner London primary schools are from ethnic minorities

In terms of the diversity of the population, more than 80% of children in inner London primary schools are from ethnic minorities and more than half do not speak English as a first language.




7. Slowest growth

The City of London ("the Square Mile") is in line for the slowest growth. Between 2015 and 2039 its population is forecast to grow by 4,000 people.


The City of London, central London, has the slowest predicted population growth

Richmond has the second slowest population increase, where the number of people is expected to expand by 15,000 between 2015 and 2039, while Sutton follows with a predicted 19,000 increase.




8. All squeezed in...

The total area of London is 1,572 sq km (607 sq m) with a population density of 5,491 people per sq km.


Despite feeling overcrowded, London's population density is dwarfed by cities like Mumbai, Seoul and Lagos. The metropolis is 607 sq mi in area. As a comparison, New York City is 469 sq mi in area



9. Hatched and dispatched

According to GLA figures there were 131,011 births in 2013 - that's 359 babies born each day.

And during 2013, some 48,078 Londoners died - equivalent to 132 people passing away each day.


On average, one baby was born every four minutes in London during 2013


BBC News - London's population high: Top metropolis facts
 
Last edited:

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
28,429
146
63
A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
With almost 9 million people, you can expect the odd 15 ton greaseball to clog Bazalgette's sewer system.

London is as big as Canada's eight biggest cities - Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Quebec City and Winnipeg - put together.

There are no cities in Canada that have these problems, mainly because we don't consumer a quart of grease with every meal and we have proper waste treatment facilities.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,400
1,667
113
There are no cities in Canada that have these problems, mainly because we don't consumer a quart of grease with every meal and we have proper waste treatment facilities.


Your post may, just about, be approaching the edges of the realms of truth had it been the case that fatbergs were composed entirely of fatty food deposits.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
With almost 9 million people, you can expect the odd 15 ton greaseball to clog Bazalgette's sewer system.

London is as big as Canada's eight biggest cities - Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Quebec City and Winnipeg - put together.

Yea, I'd like to visit London one day.

Britain in general puts our country to shame on so many levels.