The Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Area is the official name of the area surrounding the city of Johannesburg, in South Africa. It includes Johannesburg and the areas of the East Rand and West Rand. It is sometimes also referred to as the Witwatersrand.
The metropolitan area is roughly elliptical in shape, with more development around the core city of Johannesburg. The area stretches almost 100 kilometres east-west from Randfonetin to Nigel, and some 60 kilometres north-south from Midrand to Orange Farm and Vosloorus. The contiguous built-up urban area is listed as being 1,300km² in land size, which is by far the largest city in Africa in terms of urban sprawl.
Greater Johannesburg's growth was largely based initially on the discovery of gold, and the urban area runs the length of the gold-bearing reef from east to west. In the past 30 years, there has been considerable growth to the north, as Johannesburg has expanded. Sandton, created as a separate municipal area north of Johannesburg in 1969, is where much of the new business growth has taken place.
In keeping with the definition of a metropolitan area, Johannesburg is multi-nodal, with several centres which are important within their own right: these include Sandton, Randburg, Midrand, Germiston, Roodepoort, Kempton Park, Boksburg, Benoni and Springs. The urban area is often described as having an inner urban core and an outer core, with the focal point being the Johannesburg CBD.
The case for including the East and West Rand in Johannesburg, as well as Soweto, is based on a number of factors:
- The area shares the same dialling code (011).
- The East Rand and Soweto campuses of the former Vista University are incoprorated into the University of Johannesburg.
- Johannesburg International Airport is located on the East Rand.
- Residents from both the East and West Rand often work in Johannesburg.
- The areas are not only strongly linked economically, but existing transport axes have also created strong functional links between Johannesburg and its hinterland.
Over the years, Johannesburg and Pretoria have also been growing together, and the two cities share a common border. Questions have been raised as to whether they are beginning to function as one, and if this constitutes an extension of the metropolitan area to include Pretoria. Research suggests, however, that Pretoria is a metropolitan area in its own right, and that Johannesburg and Pretoria actually form the start of a megalopolitan system, with Johannesburg as its apex. The inclusion of another major metropolitan area to the south of Johannesburg, the Vaal Triangle, also forms part of this megalopolis, as a concept first coined and defined by French geographer Jean Gottman.
Johannesburg is listed as having a metropolitan area population area of 7.85 million, about one third the size of Greater New York.