HUNTSVILLE-DECATUR COMBINED STATISTICAL AREA

'Huntsville-Decatur Combined Statistical Area'
'Separate Metro Areas' Huntsville Metropolitan Area
Decatur Metropolitan Area
'Core Cities' Huntsville
Decatur
'Counties Included'Jackson
Lawrence
Limestone
Marshall
Madison
Morgan
'Area'
 - 'Total'
 - 'Water'

11,577 km² (4,487 mi²)
499 km² (194.61 mi²)
'Population'
 

510,088
'Time zone' Central: UTC–6

The 'Huntsville-Decatur Combined Statistical Area' is the most populated Sub-Region of North Alabama, and is the second fastest growing region in the State of Alabama, with 510,088 living within the CSA. It is also currently the 93rd largest CSA in the country.
The CSA is situated along the Tennessee River, and is made up of two separate Metropolitan Areas that are usually referred to as one. These MSA's are: Huntsville Metropolitan Area, and Decatur Metropolitan Area.
The cities included are: Athens, Decatur, Guntersville, Hartselle, Huntsville, Madison, and Scottsboro, as well as: Jackson County, Lawrence County, Limestone County, Madison County, Marshall County, and Morgan County.
Huntsville is the largest city in the area with a population of 168,132 people, and a metro population of 376,753. Decatur is the second largest city with a population of 55,758 people, and a metro population of 149,549. (All populations are based on the 2006 Estimated Population).

Contents
Counties
Metropolitan areas included
Cities
Core cities
Suburbs with more than 20,000 inhabitants
Suburbs with 10,000 - 19,999 inhabitants
Suburbs with 5,000 - 9,999 inhabitants
Suburbs with less than 4,999 inhabitants
Education
K-12 education
Institutions of higher education
Geography
Infrastructure
Roadways
Huntsville/Madison roadways
Economy
TVA links
Major employers
See also
External links

Counties



Jackson

Lawrence

Limestone

Madison

Marshall

Morgan

Metropolitan areas included



Decatur Metropolitan Area

★ Huntsville Metropolitan Area

Cities


Core cities


Huntsville

Decatur
Suburbs with more than 20,000 inhabitants


Athens

Madison
Suburbs with 10,000 - 19,999 inhabitants


Albertville

Hartselle

Scottsboro
Suburbs with 5,000 - 9,999 inhabitants


Arab

Boaz

Guntersville

Moores Mill
Suburbs with less than 4,999 inhabitants





Ardmore, Alabama

Ardmore, Tennessee

Burningtree Mountain

Bridgeport

Courtland

Danville

Douglas

Dutton

Elkmont

Eva

Falkville

Grant

Gurley

Harvest

Hazel Green


Hillsboro

Hollywood

Hulaco

Hytop

Lacey's Spring

Langston

Lester

Meridianville

Mooresville

Morgan City

Moulton

Moulton Heights

New Hope

New Market

North Courtland


Owens Cross Roads

Paint Rock

Pisgah

Pleasant Groves

Priceville

Redstone Arsenal

Section

Skyline

Somerville

Stevenson

Tanner

Town Creek

Triana

Trinity

Union Grove

Woodville

Education


K-12 education

'School systems by county:'
'Madison'

★ Huntsville City Schools [1]

★ Madison County Schools [2]

★ Madison City Schools [3]
'Limestone'

★ Athens City Schools [4]

★ Limestone County Schools [5]
'Morgan'

Decatur City Schools [6]

★ Hartselle City Schools [7]

★ Morgan County Schools [8]
'Jackson'

★ Jackson County Schools [9]

★ Scottsboro City Schools [10]
'Marshall'

★ Albertville City Schools [11]

★ Arab City Schools [12]

★ Boaz City Schools [13]

★ Guntersville City Schools [14]

★ Marshall County Schools [15]
'Lawrence'

★ Lawrence County Schools [16]
Institutions of higher education


Calhoun Community College System


Calhoun Decatur Campus


Calhoun Redstone Arsenal Campus


Calhoun Huntsville/Cummings Research Park Campus

University of Alabama in Huntsville

Alabama A&M University

Oakwood College

★ Huntsville Regional Medical Campus of the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine [17];

Athens State University[18];

Georgia Institute of Technology's two sites[19] [20];

Faulkner University[21];

Columbia College[22];

Virginia College[23];

Florida Institute of Technology[24], and

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University[25].

Geography


The geography of the Huntsville-Decatur Metro Area ranges from the tall peaks of the southern Appalachian Mountains, to the low valleys formed by the Tennessee River. Decatur sits on the southern shore of the Tennessee River, while Huntsville lies about 10 Miles from the Tennessee River, and sits at the base of Monte Sano Mountain.

Tennessee Valley

Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge

Monte Sano State Park

Cathedral Caverns State Park

Lake Guntersville State Park

Joe Wheeler State Park

Infrastructure


Roadways

The heart of the Huntsville-Decatur Metro Area (Huntsville, Decatur, and Madison) is linked together by the 22 mile strip of Interstate 565.
Interstate 565 begins at the very edge of the Decatur City Limits at a major interchange with Interstate 65. At the interchange, Alternate US 72 and State Route 20 turn into a controlled access highway taking up the name Interstate 565 as it passes under Interstate 65 receiving traffic from the north - (Nashville), and south - (Birmingham / Decatur) on top of the nearly 40,000-51,000 vehicles per day driving from Decatur to Huntsville on the Alternate US 72 Corridor.
Plans are underway to extend Interstate 565 from the Interstate 65/Alternate US 72/State Route 20 interchange to the US 31/State Route 20/Alternate US 72 interchange in Decatur's Limestone County limits. Eventually the extended Interstate Highway will cross the Tennessee River's Wheeler Lake connecting with the proposed Memphis to Atlanta Highway.
Huntsville/Madison roadways

As Interstate 565 exits the northern portion of the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge, Madison Boulevard (formerly State Route 20) branches off of the interstate leading into Madison. After Madison Boulevard converges with Interstate 565 9 miles down the road, Research Park Boulevard, an important north/south expressway serving Cummings Research Park, Madison Square Mall, and Redstone Arsenal bypasses Huntsville's busier Memorial Parkway.
Interstate 565 winds past the US Space and Rocket Center. As it approaches downtown, the interstate becomes elevated. About a half mile after the elevated portion of the interstate begins is the largest interchange in Huntsville. Also known as "Malfunction Junction" to locals, the I-565/Memorial Parkway interchange carries over 150,000 vehicles a day. Memorial Parkway stretches from the Tennessee River to Normal. The Parkway feeds the congested 7-lane University Drive, also known as US 72. Also fed by the Parkway is the narrow, 5-lane Governors Drive (US 431) that serves southeast Huntsville, Hampton Cove, and Huntsville Hospital.
Eventually, Interstate 565 climbs up Chapman Mountain, and descends the other side towards Gurley as US 72.

Decatur roadways


Decatur, being only a midsized city, has not yet seen the conveniences of a drastically controlled access highway passing through the city limits.
Decatur's main roadways are 6th Avenue - (US 31), and The Beltline - State Route 67.
6th Avenue, part of U.S. Route 31, begins as both State Route 20/Alternate US 72, and US 31 are carved out of the "Steamboat Bill" Hudson Memorial Bridge that crosses the Tennessee River at the north central part of town. AL 20/Alt US 72 continues west towards The Shoals, after The Beltline begins in the vicinity of the Solutia plant. After the Tennessee River bridges 6th Avenue continues southward where it eventually intersects with The Beltline. After that intersection, 6th Avenue continues southward now under the name of Decatur Highway towards Hartselle and Birmingham.
The Beltline was built as a western bypass to cure 6th Avenue of its congestion problem. The area around the Beltline experinced rapid growth, causing even worse traffic problems. The city's approach to this is to widen the road to six lanes, which should be completed by 2010.

Economy


The economy of the Huntsville-Decatur Metro Area is made up mostly of Technical, Aerospace, Manufacturing, and Defensive jobs, and companies. More engineers per capita live in this metropolitan area than anywhere else in the United States. Huntsville is also home to the second largest research park in the country, Cummings Research Park.
The Huntsville-Decatur Metro Area is the second fastest growing region/metro area in the state of Alabama because of the ample job opportunities being instilled in the area. Both ports in the metro area are two of the busiest in the state. Huntsville International Airport is the second busiest in Alabama, and still growing, trailing Birmingham International Airport in Birmingham. The Port of Decatur, along the Tennessee River, has grown to be the largest/busiest along the Tennessee River; the Port of Decatur, as well as Port of Huntsville, are almost assured great futures.
===TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority)===
The Tennessee Valley Authority was established by FDR's New Deal plan, creating numerous dams, locks, nuclear power plants, coal power plants, along with many others, to create jobs along one of the most poverty ridden regions in the United States. The TVA has turned many tired North Alabama towns into some of the most technologically advanced cities in the country. A high quality of living, has helped to fuel the Huntsville and Decatur area's explosion into the aerospace, bio-technical, and other research market areas of the U.S..
The Tennessee Valley Authority has grown to be the largest public utility provider in the United States.
TVA links


TVA home page

WPA Photographs of TVA Archaeological Projects
Major employers


ADTRAN

Athens Limestone Hospital - Athens/Limestone County

Boeing - Decatur/Huntsville

United Launch Alliance - Decatur

Calhoun Community College System - Decatur/Huntsville

Cinram- Huntsville

Cummings Research Park

Decatur General Hospital system - Decatur

Huntsville Hospital System - Huntsville

International Paper - Courtland/North Courtland/Lawrence County

Intergraph- Madison

Marshall Space Flight Center - Huntsville/Madison County

Meow Mix - Decatur

Nucor Corporation - Decatur

Parkway Medical Center - Decatur

Redstone Arsenal - Huntsville/Madison County

SAIC- Huntsville

Teledyne Brown Engineering - Huntsville

Toyota - Huntsville

TVA - Decatur/Limestone County

University of Alabama in Huntsville - Huntsville

Vulcan Materials Company - Trinity, Scottsboro, Huntsville

See also



Tennessee Valley

Tennessee

North Alabama


External links


===Huntsville links===

City of Huntsville

Convention and Visitors Bureau

Chamber of Commerce
===Decatur links===

★ Official City Website: DigitalDecatur

Official Decatur-Morgan County Website

''The Decatur Daily''

Decatur Convention & Visitor's Bureau

Decatur Morgan County Chamber of Commerce

Decatur City Schools

Decatur Sports

Alabama Jubilee - Hot Air Balloon Classic

Decatur Parks and Recreation

Morgan County Economic Development Association

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