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  1. According to the most recent definition agreed upon by the federal and state governments, the population of Greater Mexico City is 21.3 million, which makes it the second largest metropolitan area of the Western Hemisphere (behind São Paulo, Brazil), the eleventh-largest agglomeration (2017), and the largest Spanish-speaking city in the world ...

  2. What is the difference between Mexico City and Los Angeles? Find out which is better and their overall performance in the city ranking.

    • New York City, 469 square miles. Almost the same size, as of 2013 New York City fit 8.3 million people within its city limits. That compares to just about 4 million in LA (but a total of more than 10 million when you include all of LA County).
    • San Francisco, 47 square miles. The City by the Bay famously measures in at just seven by seven, yet it still ranks 13th in the US’s most populous cities (LA is second in the country) thanks to a density much higher than some larger municipalities.
    • London, 671 square miles. London and Los Angeles have almost the same number of residents, however, London was founded in 43 AD and LA didn’t come along until 1781, so they did kind of get a head start.
    • Paris, 40 square miles. Paris, like San Francisco, is a technically small city within a larger area known as the Île-de-France région. Nonetheless, 2,229,621 people lived within those 40 square miles as of 2013.
  3. Mar 18, 2015 · Los Angeles is big. Like, you know, really big. The L.A. city limits contain a land area of 469 square miles, with a population of some 3.8 million people at a density of over 27,000 people per square mile.

  4. Mexico city (Mexico) size comparison. S ave. 1,485 km2 / 573 mile2. Mexico City is the capital and largest city of Mexico and the most-populous city in North America. Mexico City is one of the most important cultural and financial centres in the world.

  5. Mar 23, 2015 · San Francisco, Boston, and New York trounce LA in terms of density; Anchorage, Houston, and San Diego are significantly less dense than LA, while Seattle has barely fewer people per square mile....

  6. Feb 27, 2008 · Today, that figure nears 20 million, spread over 1,400 square kilometers. The city's subway system illustrates its growth. Like Los Angeles', it is geographically skeletal. The...

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