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Covering 4,407 square miles (11,410 km 2) and with a population of 967,604 (2020), [2] the Omaha metropolitan area is the most populous in both Nebraska and Iowa (although the Des Moines–West Des Moines MSA is the largest MSA centered entirely in Iowa), and is the 58th most populous MSA in the United States.
Missouri–Iowa line: Iowa: Fremont: Hamburg: 2.126: 3.421: Iowa 333 west / Loess Hills National Scenic Byway north: Washington–Sidney township line: 7.947: 12.789: Iowa 2 west / CR J46 east – Riverton, Nebraska City: Southern end of Iowa 2 overlap; former Iowa 42: Sidney: 12.667: 20.386: Iowa 2 east – Shenandoah: Northern end of Iowa 2 ...
Metro Transit, previously known as Metro Area Transit, is the mass transportation provider for Omaha, Nebraska.Metro currently operates around 135 buses throughout the Omaha–Council Bluffs metropolitan area, including Bellevue, Ralston, La Vista, and Papillion in Nebraska and Council Bluffs in Iowa.
Interstate 480 (I-480) is a 4.9-mile-long (7.9 km) auxiliary Interstate Highway that connects I-80 in Downtown Omaha, Nebraska, with I-29 in Council Bluffs, Iowa.The portion of I-480 in Nebraska has been named the Gerald R. Ford Expressway, named in honor of the former president, who was a native of Omaha.
Omaha City Hall is located at 1819 Farnam Street in downtown Omaha, Nebraska. It is the seat of government for the City of Omaha. See also
The Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge [3] is a 3,000-foot (910 m) footbridge across the Missouri River between Council Bluffs, Iowa, and Omaha, Nebraska. It opened on September 28, 2008. It opened on September 28, 2008.
Here are three keys for No. 3 Ohio State against Iowa on Saturday: Take care of the ball. Kirk Ferentz’s teams are perennially among the best in the Big Team at forcing takeaways and limiting them.
Logan Fontenelle, an interpreter for the Omaha Tribe when it ceded the land that became the city of Omaha to the U.S. government. Various Native American tribes had lived in the land that became Omaha since the 17th century, including the Omaha and Ponca, Dhegihan-Siouan language people who had originated in the lower Ohio River valley and migrated west by the early 17th century; Pawnee, Otoe ...