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The UK’s future seaside megacity as 2 ‘close to merging’ | UK | News

England is a small island country with many large cities that seem to be slowly approaching each other as the urbanization of its surroundings. On the southern coast of England, two may consist of a metropolis in the future, which has been suggested. Portsmouth and Southampton are very proud and historical places with their own identities, including famous football clubs that do not like each other. The Titanic departed from the latter on his malicious journey, and the first was home to the royal navy, Lord Nelson’s HMS victory was proudly placed there.

However, some argued that the future of the two cities appeared intertwined and “in the process of being a confiratory that forces the M27”. Indeed, a town chain and a village chain like Portchester, Fareham, Titchfield, Warsash and Sarisbury are already connected to the pure eye. A person wrote in Reddit that places, including Eastleight and Havant between Southampton and Portsmouth, “turned into a green gap between them”.

“Give a few decades and two national parks (new forest and South Downs), a city/suburban mass everywhere limited.

“From Winchester to Totton and the East, at least to Havant/Emsworth.

“Give Hell, give a century, and you can fill the villages between Havant and Chichester and potentially run this confiratory to Brightton.”

However, another account suggested that it would represent “urban spread” instead of a large city.

They said: “The 19 miles between the two were quite urbanized, but when it was presented to an unplanned development and land use.”

The person is sure that this will continue, but he thinks that “a Megakite opportunity is a unsuccessful Sleent City scheme in the mid -1960s”.

The proposal included the participation of Southampton and Portsmouth’s urban areas into a single large municipality with potentially a population of up to 750,000.

Near Eastleight, a scattered, landscaping city with a new regional center that could potentially overshadow was to be deployed.

“This would be better backward because this proposed a completely new center and a consistent way of creating a completely new center between the two, but I would be surprised if such a plan would reappear.

“I see that cultural loyalty to Portsmouth or Southampton, a little west of Titchfield to Southampton, is still clearly limited. In both ways, more people can be weakened if more people move to the region without cultural proximity.”

However, another account suggested that the idea was not so advanced.

He wrote: “I wouldn’t be sure. Before moving to Sussex permanently, I went from Havant and Portsmouth to Sussex for ten years.

“Only then I saw the housing developments from the skirts of Warblington gradually into the east.

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