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Census Bureau estimate: Gainesville population reaches 40,000

By Ken Stanford Contributing Editor
Posted 12:01AM on Friday 26th May 2017 ( 7 years ago )

The population of Gainesville reached 40,000 as of July 1 last year, according to estimates released Thursday by the U.S. Census Bureau.

That's up from an estimated 38,649 a year earlier and 33,804 at the time of the last Census in 2010.

Among other cities and towns in Hall County:  Buford's 2016 population estimate is 14,356 compared to 13,982 in 2015 (part of Buford is also in Gwinnett County); Braselton, part of which is also in Jackson, Barrow, and Gwinnett counties,  10,234 (2016) vs. 9,461 (2015); Flowery Branch 7,073 vs. 6,728; Clermont 947 vs. 921; Gillsville 249 vs. 247; Lula, part of which is in Banks County, 2,882 vs. 2,875; and Oakwood 4,161 vs. 4,119. 

This report should not be confused with one issued in March which detailed countywide population estimates.

Click here to find population estimates for other cities in the area, the state and the country.

Nationally, ten of the 15 fastest-growing cities with populations of 50,000 or more were spread across the South in 2016, with four of the top five found in Texas, according to the report.

Conroe, Texas, a northern Houston suburb, was the fastest-growing of the 15, seeing a 7.8 percent increase from 2015 to 2016, a growth rate more than 11 times that of the nation.

The rest of the top five fastest-growing large cities were Frisco, Texas, a northern Dallas suburb, with a 6.2 percent increase; McKinney, Texas, another northern Dallas suburb, saw a 5.9 percent increase; Greenville, South Carolina, ran up a 5.8 percent increase; and Georgetown, Texas, a northern Austin suburb, had a 5.5 percent increase.

"Overall, cities in the South continue to grow at a faster rate than any other U.S. region," said demographer Amel Toukabri of the bureau's population division.

Since the 2010 Census, the populations of large southern cities grew by an average of 9.4 percent, while cities in the West grew by 7.3 percent. Northeastern cities showed 1.8 percent growth, while populations of Midwestern cities grew by 3.0 percent.

Four cities in the West were among the top 15: Bend, Oregon; Buckeye, Arizona; Lehi, Utah; and Meridian, Idaho. One Midwestern city, Ankeny, Iowa, made the top 15, while the Northeast was shut out.

New York remains the largest U.S. city by a wide margin, its population of 8.5 million people being more than twice that of the 4 million of runner-up Los Angeles. Chicago trailed in third place with 2.7 million residents, despite a population loss of 8,638.

Phoenix showed the largest one-year numerical population increase of 32,113 from 2015 to 2016.

League City, Texas, situated between Houston and Galveston, was the lone city to cross the 100,000 population threshold, reaching 102,010 in 2016.

Only North Dakota and the District of Columbia saw the addition of housing units increase by more than the pre-2007 levels of 1.4 percent. North Dakota housing stock increased by 1.6 percent from 2015 to 1026, while that in D.C. grew by 1.4 percent.

(The Associated Press contributed to this story.)

http://accesswdun.com/article/2017/5/540328/census-bureau-estimate-gainesville-population-reaches-40000

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