The Piedmont Crescent, also known as the Piedmont Urban Crescent, is a large, polycentric urbanized region in the U.S. state of North Carolina that forms the northern section of the rapidly developing Piedmont Atlantic megalopolis (or "megaregion"), a conurbation also known as the "I-85 Boombelt", which extends from the Raleigh area in North Carolina, southwards to Atlanta, Georgia in the southeastern United States.[1]
The region includes seven of North Carolina's ten largest cities (with the exception of southcentral Fayetteville, coastal Wilmington and eastern Greenville) and encompasses many smaller cities, towns, and suburban areas. The three major metropolitan areas within the Piedmont Crescent are the Research Triangle, Piedmont Triad, and Charlotte metropolitan area, which have a total population of 7,492,161 people, roughly the same in geographic area (11,256.36 sq mi) and population as the Atlanta, Georgia region (7,221,137 / 10,494.03 sq mi), and together representing over 69% of the state's total population.[2]
Ten major universities—Duke, NC State, UNC Chapel Hill, UNC Charlotte, NC Central, Wake Forest, UNC-Greensboro, NC A&T State University, Elon University and High Point University —and three international airports (CLT, RDU and GSO), as well as Research Triangle Park, also are located within the Piedmont Crescent.
History
editResidents commonly attribute the development of the Crescent communities to the Indian Trading Path and related settlements established by indigenous peoples long before European contact.[3] The Trading Path was also used by European traders, and later by settlers entering the backcountry regions of the piedmont of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.
Forming the shape of a crescent in North Carolina, the region is located in the central Piedmont area of the state. European-American settlement progressed generally from the east to the west, from what is now metropolitan Raleigh-Durham and the Research Triangle area at its eastern edge, through the Piedmont Triad cities of Greensboro and Winston-Salem at its center, and southwest to metropolitan Charlotte. This region has undergone sustained population and economic growth (acutely in the Charlotte and Raleigh areas) since the late 19th century, a trend that has accelerated since the late 20th century. It is notable as the fourth-largest manufacturing region in the country,[4] as well as an international center of banking and finance, textiles, biotech and high technology.
The Piedmont Crescent name is thought to have been coined when the North Carolina Railroad company first laid tracks through the area in 1855–56. The railway, which was named the "Piedmont Crescent Railroad", brought extensive growth to the communities along its route. These evolved to comprise today's interlinked urbanized region. Although the freight and passenger rail corridor remains of critical importance, the region's Interstate 85 and Interstate 40 freeway system serves as its primary transportation link today.
Major cities
editPrimary cities
edit- Charlotte (880,000+)
- Raleigh (470,000+)
- Greensboro (290,000+)
- Durham (270,000+)
- Winston-Salem (250,000+)
- Cary (170,000+)
- High Point (110,000+)
Piedmont Crescent Core Counties
editCounty | 2020 Estimate | 2010 Census | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Wake County | 1,132,271 | 900,993 | +25.67% |
Mecklenburg County | 1,128,945 | 919,628 | +22.76% |
Guilford County | 540,521 | 488,406 | +10.67% |
Forsyth County | 383,843 | 350,670 | +9.46% |
Durham County | 327,306 | 267,587 | +22.32% |
Gaston County | 226,568 | 206,086 | +9.94% |
Cabarrus County | 221,479 | 178,011 | +24.42% |
Davidson County | 169,234 | 162,878 | +3.90% |
Alamance County | 171,346 | 151,131 | +13.38% |
Rowan County | 142,495 | 138,428 | +2.94% |
Orange County | 149,077 | 133,801 | +11.42% |
Counties Total | 4,593,085 | 3,897,619 | +17.84% |
Other cities
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ City of Greenville, SC Official City Website
- ^ Source: US Bureau of the Census, Annual Estimates of the Population Table CBSA-EST2007-02
- ^ Gladys Rebecca Dobbs, The Indian Trading Path and Colonial Settlement Development in the North Carolina Piedmont, PhD dissertation, 2006, University of North Carolina, p. iii, accessed 3 Apr 2010
- ^ Charlotte Chamber of Commerce: Charlotte, Center of the Nation's 4th Largest Manufacturing Region