Your Guide to the New Haven Metro

Connecticut's academic and cultural capital sits on Long Island Sound at the confluence of the Quinnipiac and Mill rivers — an 860,000-person metro built around Yale University and the Naugatuck River valley. Discover New Haven — home to Yale University and the Yale Bowl, the Peabody Museum, the Shubert Theatre, Yale-New Haven Hospital (Connecticut's largest), the historic New Haven Green, Wooster Square and the city's renowned pizza, Southern Connecticut State University, and the nearby Naugatuck Valley cities of Waterbury, Naugatuck, and Ansonia along the Metro-North Waterbury Branch.


Regions

Explore New Haven

6 regions, 0 communities.

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New Haven
Connecticut's second-largest metro hub and home to Yale University (founded 1701...
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Greater New Haven
The immediate suburban ring around New Haven. Anchored by Hamden (home to Quinni...
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Shoreline East
The eastern coastal band of New Haven County along Long Island Sound toward the ...
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Waterbury / Naugatuck Valley
The Naugatuck Valley is the industrial river corridor along the Naugatuck River,...
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Meriden / Wallingford
The northern New Haven County corridor along I-91 between New Haven and Hartford...
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Western New Haven Co
The western rural/exurban edge of New Haven County along I-84 and US-6, transiti...

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