The
video
above
and
the
maps
below
show
the
densest
neighbourhood
in
each
European
country
based
on
their
population
in
2018.
In
this
case
neighbourhood
is
being
defined
as
1km
x
1km
square
(1
KM2),
with
the
number
of
people
being
shown.
The
video
and
maps
were
created
by
Alasdair
Rae
and
you
can
read
the
full
explanation
here.
The
neighbourhoods
ranges
from
a
high
of
52,767
people
in
Barcelona
Spain
to
a
low
of
2,030
people
in
Schaan
Liechtenstein.
Here
they
are
in
order:
1.
Barcelona,
Spain:
52,767
2.
Paris,
France:
51,127
3.
Bucharest
Romania:
39,551
4.
Rome,
Italy:
37,192
5.
Budapest,
Hungary:
32,186
6.
Vienna,
Austria:
31,813
7.
Szczecin,
Poland:
31,731
8.
Brussels,
Belgium:
29,055
9.
Thessaloniki,
Greece:
28,771
10.
Stockholm,
Sweden:
27,054
11.
Berlin,
Germany:
26,155
12.
Prague,
Czechia:
25,868
13.
Amsterdam,
Netherlands:
23,302
14.
Tirana,
Albania:
23,149
15.
Copenhagen,
Denmark:
23,136
16.
Geneva,
Switzerland:
22,624
17.
Lisbon,
Portugal:
22,306
18.
London,
United
Kingdom:
21,725
19.
Belgrade,
Serbia:
20,609
20.
Polvdiv,
Bulgaria:
19,471
21.
Kosice,
Slovakia:
19,059
22.
Split,
Croatia:
18,979
23.
Oslo,
Norway:
18,455
24.
Tallinn,
Estonia:
16,861
25.
Vilnius,
Lithuania:
16,796
26.
Riga,
Latvia:
15,995
27.
Valletta,
Malta:
15,980
28.
Prizren,
Kosovo:
15,923
29.
Helsinki,
Finland:
15,219
30.
Dublin,
Ireland:
13,082
31.
Skopje,
North
Macedonia:
12,622
32.
Sarajevo,
Bosnia
and
Herzegovina:
12,545
33.
Ljubljana,
Slovenia:
11,077
34.
Esch-sur-Alzette,
Luxembourg:
9,813
35.
Bijelo
Polje,
Montenegro:
8,511
36.
Reykjavik,
Iceland:
6,666
37.
Nicosia,
Cyprus:
6,175
38.
Schaan,
Lichtenstein:
2,030
You
can
see
all
the
maps
in
Alasdair
Rae’s
Google
Drive
here.
Which
city/country
surprised
you
the
most?
Go to Source
Author: Brilliant Maps