Today, Lima and Callao have conurbanized to the point that only signs mark the borders. Hundreds of streets and highways link the two cities. •
Taxicabs vary in quality of service and price. Most can be simply stopped at any street, private taxi companies can be called to pick up passengers at a certain address. To improve the quality of taxis running in Lima, a new law was passed to prohibit importing used cars; thanks to this law, the city of Lima has ensured that taxis and other motorists drive increasingly new vehicles, thereby reducing smog. •
Bus Numerous inter-urban bus companies offer transportation to other cities in Peru. Quality varies depending on the price, from luxury express buses to ill-maintained and crowded micros. •
Mass-transit systems:
El Metropolitano: The newly completed bus system called Metropolitano is an above-ground
mass-transit system which traverses the
north area,
the north-central area,
the downtown, other residential districts,
the financial district,
the south central area, and the
Cono Sur. The system starts in
Chorrillos (southern Lima) and finishes in the limit of
Independencia and
Comas (northern Lima). Plans for additional lines were abandoned in favor of adding complementary lines to the existing route.
Lima Metro: In 2010, the government of
Alan García renewed the project of
Lima Metro, starting with the construction of Line 1. It calls for the construction and implementation of 11.7 kilometres (7.3 mi) (with a total of 22.5 kilometres (14.0 mi)) of viaduct elevated of double ramp from the Atocongo Bridge to
downtown Lima. The
Lima Metro Line 1 is being built by a consortium made up by two engineering and construction companies. It is estimated that construction will be complete by December 2010, with remaining work the electrification of the line. Siemens Engineering has responsibility for that portion. The first part of Line 1 must be completed in June 2011 and starts daily operations in July 2011. •
Air transport Lima's main passenger gateway for national and international air travelers is
Jorge Chávez International Airport located in
Callao (11 km.
northwest from the center).
Population distribution % of the metro area's total population, sorted by district areas: •
Lima Norte (
Ancón,
Carabayllo,
Comas,
Independencia,
Los Olivos,
Puente Piedra,
Rimac,
San Martin de Porres,
Santa Rosa): 26% •
Lima Este (
Ate,
Cieneguilla,
Chaclacayo,
El Agustino,
La Molina,
Lurigancho-Chosica San Juan de Lurigancho,
San Luis,
Santa Anita): 12% •
Lima Sur (
Barranco,
Chorrillos,
Lurín,
Pachacámac,
Pucusana,
Punta Hermosa,
Punta Negra,
San Bartolo,
San Juan de Miraflores,
Santa María del Mar,
Villa el Salvador,
Villa María del Triunfo): 20% •
Central Lima (
Breña,
La Victoria,
Lima,
Lince,
Pueblo Libre,
San Miguel): 11% •
Residential Lima (
Jesús María,
Magdalena del Mar,
Miraflores,
San Borja,
San Isidro,
Santiago de Surco,
Surquillo): 19% •
Callao (
Bellavista,
Callao District,
Carmen de la Legua Reynoso,
La Perla,
La Punta,
Ventanilla District): 12%
Growth of the metropolitan area The following maps show how the Lima/Callao metropolitan area has grown over the years. The first map shows the population in 1535, which is the year Lima was founded, and the last map shows the population in 2006.
Future as a megacity The Lima metropolitan area has become an unofficial
megacity (a
metropolitan area of more than ten million people) as of 2017. It was the first in the Andean States, the fourth in South America, the fifth in Latin America and the seventh in the Americas. According to the
Globalization and World Cities Research Network, Lima is currently a Beta + city, one subcategory away from being in the"Alpha" category. == See also ==