Most people think of urban sprawl as the construction of roads and buildings at a rate that exceeds population growth. Phoenix, Arizona, however, offers a contrasting model of sprawl. Its metropolitan area has grown more than 300 percent in recent decades, but its population has grown even faster. Since the mid-1980’s, the city’s population density has increased as people continue to move to the region even as the urban area’s boundaries have grown more slowly. This trend is by necessity, since the water supply cannot feed an ever-expanding metropolitan area.
As more people moved to Phoenix, demand for water increased, leading to serious problems. By the 1960’s, most of the city’s water was drawn from the ground, and the surface would sink when the water table dropped too far. The Central Arizona Project (CAP), an aqueduct system that brings water from the Colorado River, was completed in the late 1980’s. Initially, most of that water was used by farmers, but more recently, the CAP has been supplying urban areas with growing populations. Today, more than 3.3 million people live in the Phoenix metropolitan area.
The CAP and other surface water projects have reduced Arizona’s dependence on groundwater, but they have not eliminated the problem of groundwater withdrawal. Furthermore, recent droughts have heightened concerns that Phoenix needs more water to sustain its human population. Water conservation will be vital in supplying water to Phoenix’s growing population. One study suggested that water conservation, high density “smart growth,” and the reduction of outdoor water uses could reduce wasted water by up to 77 percent. Planners in Phoenix and other cities of the arid West welcome numbers like these, for they may mean that cities can grow without using ever more resources.
This visualization uses a combination of map data and satellite imagery to illustrate the rise of modern Phoenix. Phoenix is home to the Central Arizona–Phoenix Long-Term Ecological Research site (CAP LTER). As part of their effort to document the landscape history of the region, the CAP LTER has produced a series of maps showing the historical boundaries of Phoenix and its surrounding agricultural areas from 1912 to the present day. The United States Environmental Protection Agency has also documented the growth of the city. We have animated the map data from CAP LTER and the EPA using satellite imagery from NASA and the United States Geological Survey (USGS) to illustrate how much Phoenix has grown. Canals are explicitly shown to emphasize the metropolitan area’s dependency on surface water.