ALASKA TRENDS.

Before Ship Creek in Anchorage became a railroad construction base in 1915, the largest community in upper Cook Inlet was Knik. What people might not appreciate is that, although the population crown has shifted across the arm, Knik still comes in second.

It's true: Knik-Fairview is the most populous censusdesignated place (CDP) in all of Alaska, with 19,297 residents in 2020, more than double the 9,054 residents in neighboring Wasilla. Fellow unincorporated areas North Lakes and Meadow Lakes likewise dwarf their incorporated neighbor, white the city of Palmer has fewer people than the non-city of Tanaina, The Gateway, South Lakes, and Fishhook neighborhoods rank among the state's most populated places, too, despite having such a low profile that some residents never heard those names before. (The US Census Bureau split the "Lakes" area into north and south tracts for the 2020 census.)

The Matanuska-Susitna Borough is surprisingly vast. The watersheds of its namesake rivers encompass as much land as West Virginia, stretching the borough's boundaries from Lake Louise in the east to the headwaters of the Skwentna and Yentna Rivers in the west, and from Susitna Glacier on the north side of the Denali Highway to the river delta just outside Chugach Electric Association's Beluga power station.

This month's article "Where the Patients Are" describes healthcare services coming to the Mat-Su in response to the area's continued population growth. Services and amenities naturally fill in as demand builds, and in the Mat-Su many services--like healthcare--are overdue.

One reason why some services may lag behind is that the majority of Mat-Su's growth is invisible from the Parks or Glenn Highways; casual passersby may never notice it. Many of the region's residents find it attractive because of the privacy that it offers. But highway or no, census takers go wherever there are people to count, allowing Alaska Trends to peek over the proverbial fence at the state's quietly booming boomtowns.

SOURCE US Census Bureau. 2020 Census Results

How big is

BIG?

The Mat-Su Borough contains the entire Matanuska and Susitna Rivers along with

27

census-designated places

3

incorporated cities

24,618

square miles

107,081

people

51,077

housing units

Growing

As of the 2020 census, the population increased by 18,086 since 2010, the fastest rate of any political...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT