
Customer Success Manager
p>The ABS has a habit of releasing interesting things just before Christmas. In 2014, they released a brand new view of Australian population density, enabling mapping which shows our population distribution in better detail than ever before. It’s called the Australian population grid, and you can find it on the ABS website.
The Australian Population Grid does away with irregularly shaped and sized SA1s, Collection Districts or Meshblocks, and divides Australia into a uniform 1km * 1km grid. This means that the grid cells are much more coarse in metropolitan areas but much more detailed in regional areas – but since they are uniform, population density can be easily mapped at scales from a city to the whole country, which means you can see patterns which would have been hidden at the mesh-block level.
Only total population figures are available, so this is not a dataset for detailed analysis, but for mapping.
The ABS have produced some maps, below and the Guardian website reproduced two versions:
A few observations on a national level:
I actually find the Guardian log scale map shows this much more clearly. This is an interactive map which I can link here but not reproduce, so go and see for yourself.
The resolution within our major cities of this grid is not so good, so mesh-blocks may be better at looking at population density on an urban scale. Nevertheless, these enlargements by the ABS show Sydney and Melbourne fairly clearly. Sydney has a lot more areas of very dense population, including the most densely populated grid square in the country – around the Potts Point area, with 14,747 people. Just out of interest, the population density of Manhattan Island, in New York, is about 26,000 people per km2.
Sydney and Melbourne are the only places in Australia where there are any 1km squares with densities of more than 8,000/km2 Melbourne has just 1 grid square in this category while Sydney has 21. Naturally there would be smaller areas of higher density in both these cities and even our lower density cities like Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, but at the 1km * 1km level, Sydney has almost all the high density.
And the maps also show a good reason for that. Sydney is surrounded by rugged mountains and wilderness areas with no population. It can’t expand outwards much more so it has a constrained footprint. As we’ve discussed previously, Sydney is growing up more than it’s growing out now.
Have you found anything interesting in the Australian Population Grid?
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