And what were Cleveland's numbers if you don't mind me asking? Because I believe Columbus is Ohio's largest city now.
Columbus city has been larger than Cleveland city since Columbus went through that period of annexation during the 90s. I believe Cleveland is still Ohio's largest metropolitan area though.
Quote:
The five largest cities by population are: Columbus, 787,033 Cleveland, 396,815 Cincinnati, 296,943 Toledo, 287,208 Akron, 199,110
Columbus grew by 10.6 percent since the 2000 Census while Cleveland dropped 17.1 percent, Cincinnati decreased by 10.4 percent, Toledo decreased by 8.4 percent, and Akron decreased by 8.3 percent.
http://www.fox8.com/news/wjw-news-ce...,7803940.story
I can't find the exact numbers, now, but I believe that Metro Cincinnati may have just inched by Metro Cleveland to become that state's largest metropolitan area. Metro Columbus in in a comfortable third place. Metro Cleveland [[along with Metro Pittsburgh) have been shrinking for decades, now. Nearby Akron and Metro Youngstown also showed a sharp decline, so that entire region is shrinking, now.
BTW, anyone read that nearly 20% of housing units in the state of Florida were vacant as of the Census count? Jeeze. Demographers are saying that it will be years just to get the ridiculously high vacancy rates down to more normal high vacancy rates.
Detroit - 777,000
Winner: Mind field. He or she guessed 715,000...just 1,223 off.
Mind field, take a bow and tell us how you did it.
.
Okay, I am ready to make my guess:
I predict that the population will decline to these numbers within the next ten to twenty years:
Detroit: Approx. 300,000
Metro Detroit: Approx. 3,200,000
Region: Approx. 4,500,000
PS: I think this is highly optimistic.
300,000 is pretty low. Lose 25% next ten years, and 25% the next ten and you'd still have 400,000.