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San Francisco Bay Area

The San Francisco Bay Area, with a population of over seven million residents, is the metropolitan area that lies along the San Francisco Bay. This ten-county area consists of cities of various size that lie more or less contiguously around the length of the bay. Three large cities dominate the area: San Francisco, San Jose, and Oakland. Because, unlike most other metropolitan areas in the United States, no single large city dominates the region, residents generally refer to the region generically as the Bay Area, without associating it with any one city. However, because San Francisco was historically the first major city in the area, and because of its densely urbanized character in constrast to its neighbors, people in the region often refer to San Francisco as simply the City.


Map of the San Francisco Bay Area

The combined area of the nine Bay Area counties is 19,000 km2 (11,780 square miles).

Because the hills, mountains, and large bodies of water produce such vast geographic diversity within this region, the Bay Area offers a signficant variety of microclimates. The areas near the Pacific Ocean are generally characterized by relatively small temperature variations during the year, with cool foggy summers and mild rainy winters. Inland areas, especially those separated from the ocean by hills or mountains, have hotter summers and colder overnight temperatures during the winter.

The population distribution of the Bay Area is generally subdivided into several smaller subregions.

Table of contents
1 List of Counties
2 Anchor Cities
3 Suburbs with more than 100,000 inhabitants
4 Suburbs with 10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants
5 Suburbs with less than 10,000 inhabitants
6 Related articles

List of Counties

Anchor Cities

Suburbs with more than 100,000 inhabitants

Suburbs with 10,000 to 100,000 inhabitants

Suburbs with less than 10,000 inhabitants

Related articles