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Richland has developed a number of parks, several of them fronting the Columbia and Yakima Rivers. The rivers provide boating, water skiing, fishing, kayaking and waterfowl hunting opportunities. [citation needed] Richland is included in a bike trail system in the Tri-Cities which is named The Sacagawea Heritage Trail. The trail is a scenic ...
As of April 1, 2021, the population of Richland was estimated at 61,320, [92] according to the Washington State Office of Financial Management, Forecasting Division. As of the 2020 census , there were 60,560 people, and according to the 2000 census, 15,549 households, and 10,682 families residing in the city.
The Kennewick–Pasco–Richland metropolitan area—colloquially referred to as the Tri-Cities metropolitan area, and officially known as the Kennewick–Richland, WA Metropolitan Statistical Area—is a metropolitan area consisting of Benton and Franklin counties in Washington state, anchored by the cities of Kennewick, Pasco, and Richland (the Tri-Cities).
Interactive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023. Points indicate major cities in the district ( Yakima , the Tri-Cities ( Kennewick , Pasco , and Richland ), and Moses Lake respectively).
West Richland is a city in Benton County, Washington. The population was 16,295 at the time of the 2020 census . [ 5 ] The city is part of the Tri-Cities metropolitan area , whose principal cities (the Tri-Cities ) are Richland , Kennewick , and Pasco .
The three smaller cities—Benton City, Prosser, and West Richland—use the "mayor-council" form of government where the mayor is the chief administrator of the city and is directly elected by the citizens. In Washington, a majority of cities use the mayor-council form, but the council-manager structure is common among medium-sized municipalities.
Roughly bounded by Willis Street to the north, Davison Avenue and Hunt Avenue to the east, Davison Avenue to the south, and George Washington Way to the west, Richland, Washington Coordinates 46°17′52″N 119°16′17″W / 46.29777°N 119.27152°W / 46.29777; -119
A section of the Richland Bypass Highway, opened in 1948 and later incorporated into SR 240, as seen from SR 224. The southern section of the Richland bypass, terminating near Hanford, was designated as Secondary State Highway 3R (SSH 3R) in 1953 and extended west via modern SR 224 to Kiona two years later.