Agglomeration communities in France explained

An agglomeration community (French: communauté d'agglomération, pronounced as /fr/) is a consortium of communes (municipalities) in France, created as a government structure by the Chevènement Law of 1999. It is one of four forms of intercommunality, less integrated than a French: [[métropole]] or a communauté urbaine but more integrated than a communauté de communes. Agglomeration communities consist of a commune of at least 15,000 inhabitants (or a prefecture with less than 15,000 inhabitants) and its independent suburbs.

As of March 2020, there are 222 agglomeration communities in France (207 in metropolitan France and 15 in the overseas departments).[1] The population (as of 2017) of the agglomeration communities ranges from 355,650 inhabitants (CA Grand Paris Sud Seine-Essonne-Sénart) to 29,289 inhabitants (CA Grand Verdun).

Several former communautés d'agglomération have been converted into communautés urbaines or métropoles, for instance those of Strasbourg, Rouen, Saint-Étienne and Caen.

List of communautés d'agglomération

The table below lists the communautés d'agglomération with more than 200,000 inhabitants (as of 2021).

Name Seat Number of communes Population (2021)
34 209,719
158 320,763
100 279,917
13 212,801
21 203,696
36 243,731
25 209,360
39 278,129
39 262,108
3 209,593
27 318,408
23 354,964
12 229,194
42 356,355
data-sort-value="Pecq"19 342,017
12 231,275
5 213,494
54 228,472
15 280,473
18 272,736

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.banatic.interieur.gouv.fr/V5/fichiers-en-telechargement/fichiers-telech.php BANATIC