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Fairfax County, Virginia
Fairfax County Courthouse.jpg
The Old Fairfax County Courthouse in late 2010
Banner of Fairfax County, Virginia
Flag seal of Fairfax County, Virginia
Seal
Guide of Virginia highlighting Fairfax County
Area in the state of Virginia
Guide of the United States highlighting Virginia
Virginia's area in the U.s.
Founded may 6, 1742
Named for thomas Fairfax, sixth Lord Fairfax of Cameron
Seat fairfax1
Biggest town herndon
Range
• Total 406 sq mi (1,052 km2)
• Land 391 sq mi (1,013 km2)
• Water 15 sq mi (39 km2), 3.8%
Populace (Est.)
• (2013) 1,116,897
• Density 2,761/sq mi (1,066/km²)
Congressional districts 8th, tenth, eleventh
Time zone eastern: UTC-5/ -4
Website www.fairfaxcounty.gov
References: 1 The area courts and managerial business locales are in unincorporated ranges in Fairfax County, yet have Fairfax, Virginia street numbers.
This article is about the district. For the city with the same name, see Fairfax, Virginia. For different utilization, see Fairfax (disambiguation).
Fairfax County, formally the County of Fairfax, is an area in the U.s. state of Virginia. As of the 2010 statistics, the populace was 1,081,726,[1] in 2013, the populace was evaluated to be 1,116,897,[2] making it the most crowded purview in the Commonwealth of Virginia, with 13.6% of Virginia's populace. The region is additionally the most crowded ward in the Washington Metropolitan Area, with 19.8% of the MSA populace, and the bigger Baltimore–washington Metropolitan Area, with 13.1% of the CSA populace. The area seat is Fairfax.[3]
Fairfax was the first district in the United States to achieve a six-figure average family salary and has the second-most elevated average family wage of any nearby ward in the United States after neighbor Loudoun County.[4][5]
The area is home to the base camp of sagacity offices, for example, the Central Intelligence Agency, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and National Reconnaissance Office, and the National Counterterrorism Center and Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The area is likewise home to ten Fortune 500 organizations, incorporating three with Falls Church addresses.[6]
Substance [hide]
1 History
2 Geography
2.1 Adjacent locales
3 Geology
4 Government and governmental issues
5 Demographics
6 Education
7 Economy
7.1 Tysons Corner
7.2 Employment
7.3 Top executives
8 Arts and society
9 Transportation
9.1 Roads
9.2 Major expressways
9.3 Air
9.4 Public transportation
10 Parks and amusement
10.1 Trails
11 Communities
11.1 Census-assigned spots
11.2 Other groups
12 Notable individuals
13 Sister urban communities
14 See likewise
15 Notes
16 Externa
Fairfax County, Virginia
Fairfax County Courthouse.jpg
The Old Fairfax County Courthouse in late 2010
Banner of Fairfax County, Virginia
Flag seal of Fairfax County, Virginia
Seal
Guide of Virginia highlighting Fairfax County
Area in the state of Virginia
Guide of the United States highlighting Virginia
Virginia's area in the U.s.
Founded may 6, 1742
Named for thomas Fairfax, sixth Lord Fairfax of Cameron
Seat fairfax1
Biggest town herndon
Range
• Total 406 sq mi (1,052 km2)
• Land 391 sq mi (1,013 km2)
• Water 15 sq mi (39 km2), 3.8%
Populace (Est.)
• (2013) 1,116,897
• Density 2,761/sq mi (1,066/km²)
Congressional districts 8th, tenth, eleventh
Time zone eastern: UTC-5/ -4
Website www.fairfaxcounty.gov
References: 1 The area courts and managerial business locales are in unincorporated ranges in Fairfax County, yet have Fairfax, Virginia street numbers.
This article is about the district. For the city with the same name, see Fairfax, Virginia. For different utilization, see Fairfax (disambiguation).
Fairfax County, formally the County of Fairfax, is an area in the U.s. state of Virginia. As of the 2010 statistics, the populace was 1,081,726,[1] in 2013, the populace was evaluated to be 1,116,897,[2] making it the most crowded purview in the Commonwealth of Virginia, with 13.6% of Virginia's populace. The region is additionally the most crowded ward in the Washington Metropolitan Area, with 19.8% of the MSA populace, and the bigger Baltimore–washington Metropolitan Area, with 13.1% of the CSA populace. The area seat is Fairfax.[3]
Fairfax was the first district in the United States to achieve a six-figure average family salary and has the second-most elevated average family wage of any nearby ward in the United States after neighbor Loudoun County.[4][5]
The area is home to the base camp of sagacity offices, for example, the Central Intelligence Agency, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and National Reconnaissance Office, and the National Counterterrorism Center and Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The area is likewise home to ten Fortune 500 organizations, incorporating three with Falls Church addresses.[6]
Substance [hide]
1 History
2 Geography
2.1 Adjacent locales
3 Geology
4 Government and governmental issues
5 Demographics
6 Education
7 Economy
7.1 Tysons Corner
7.2 Employment
7.3 Top executives
8 Arts and society
9 Transportation
9.1 Roads
9.2 Major expressways
9.3 Air
9.4 Public transportation
10 Parks and amusement
10.1 Trails
11 Communities
11.1 Census-assigned spots
11.2 Other groups
12 Notable individuals
13 Sister urban communities
14 See likewise
15 Notes
16 Externa