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Columbus: the last frontier

Once the site of a Creek Indian Village, Columbus is one of the few cities in the United States to be planned in advance of its founding.
Established in 1828 as a trading post to strengthen the western border of Georgia, it was the last "frontier town" of the original 13 colonies.
Columbus encompasses an area of approximately 218 square miles It is located in the west central part of the State of Georgia bordering on the Alabama state line, 90 miles southwest of the City of Atlanta and approximately 80 miles east of Montgomery, Alabama.

The original corporate area of Columbus was first known as the Coweta Reserve.  A tract of 1,200 acres was set aside by the State of Georgia for the location.
Tracts were reserved for a courthouse (the present site of the Government Center of Columbus), male and female academies, a jail and cemetery sites.  More significantly, a tract of land comprising between 300 and 400 acres was designated as the City Commons and reserved for future use by the public. This area is now occupied by the Columbus Civic Center, Memorial Stadium and Golden Park.
Columbus was established on the Chattahoochee River and subsequent growth has been to the north and northeast. This is because of the Alabama State line and the later establishment of Fort Benning on the south and east.  Until recent years, the economy was dominated by textiles and the military base. The central business district remains a major employment center, but typically the population centers are on the fringes of this business district. The last area of consolidation is essentially rural.

As the northern most navigable point on the Chattahoochee River from the gulf of Mexico, Columbus became a center of shipping and military manufacturing (water and rail transportation and hydro-electric power).
Columbus has extended its corporate limits eight times since 1828 to maintain pace with urban development. In 1970, the citizens of Columbus and Muscogee County, with the exception of Bibb City, which preferred to remain semi-independent, voted to consolidate.  Bibb City voted in 2001 to consolidate into Columbus.
Muscogee County encompasses approximately 140,000 acres making it the largest city in Georgia in terms of land area. The 2006 Census lists the population at 188,660.

An annual mean temperature of 61 degrees Fahrenheit allows for the year-round use of many recreational facilities that are not possible in other parts of the country. Winters typically have periods of warm weather, often reaching the low 80s. Columbus is characterized by hot, humid summers. Its favorable latitude offers an opportunity to use energy-efficient site orientation and building designs. The frost-free growing season averages about 240 days.  This is significant from the standpoint of a long turf management period.

Columbus is located on the Fall Line, the natural division of the Piedmont of north Georgia and the Costal Plain of south Georgia and Florida. Physical features include steep slopes in the north, transitioning to level terrain in the south. Several streams and creeks provide good natural drainage to the Chattahoochee River.
Fort Benning Military Reservation, a primary U.S. Army training facility, is a major employer of the region. It borders Columbus on the southeast and south.  Development patterns of the community have been significantly influenced by its presence.

The southern two-thirds of the city are essentially built-out, with single-family residential property making up 27 per cent of all land use. Commercial and industrial land uses make up approximately 10 per cent of the land use and are located principally in central Columbus, in two industrial parks bordering Fort Benning Military Reservation in east Columbus and adjacent to several major arterial roadways in north Columbus.

The north and northeast sections consist primarily of low population densities.  Many sections of this portion of the city are still undeveloped and it is in this area that most of the future growth-commercial as well as residential-is likely to occur.
Historic buildings are located mostly in the central portion of Columbus and include residential, commercial and public buildings.  Private and public actions have demonstrated the importance placed on historic resources.  Both the private and the public sectors have renovated many buildings, particularly in the Historic District immediately south of and along the western edge of the central business district.

(Adapted from http://www.columbusga.org)

 

 

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