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Haute-Garonne (Department, France): Intermunicipal Authorities

Last modified: 2024-03-30 by olivier touzeau
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Index of the Intermunicipal Authorities

  • Métropole (1)
  • Communautés d'agglomération (2)
    • Le Muretain Agglo
    • Sicoval
  • Communautés de communes (14)
    • Cagir Garonne Salat
    • Cœur et Coteaus de Comminges
    • Cœur de Garonne
    • Coteaux-Bellevue
    • Coteaux du Girou
    • Frontonnais
    • Lauragais-Revel-Sorézois
    • Lèze Ariège
    • Pyrénées Haut Garonnaises
    • Save au Touch
    • Save Garonne et Coteaux de Cadours
    • Terres du Lauragais
    • Val'Aïgo
    • Volvestre

Toulouse Métropole

[Flag]

Flag of Toulouse Métropole - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 15 January 2019

Toulouse Métropole (755,882 inhabitants in 2015; 45,820 ha) was created in January 2015, replacing the previous Communauté urbaine de Toulouse Métropole. Toulouse Métropole is composed of 37 municipalities: Aigrefeuille, Aucamville, Aussonne, Balma, Beaupuy, Beauzelle, Blagnac, Brax, Bruguières, Castelginest, Colomiers, Cornebarrieu, Cugnaux, Drémil-Lafage, Fenouillet, Flourens, Fonbeauzard, Gagnac-sur-Garonne, Gratentour, Launaguet, Lespinasse, Mondonville, Mondouzil, Mons, Montrabé, Pibrac, Pin-Balma, Quint-Fonsegrives, Saint-Alban, Saint-Jean, Saint-Jory, Saint-Orens-de-Gameville, Seilh, Toulouse, Tournefeuille, L'Union, and Villeneuve-Tolosane.
In 1992, Toulouse and 14 neighbouring municipalities formed the district du Grand Toulouse. Another six municipalities joined the district in 2000, which became a Communauté d'agglomération. Five more municipalities joined in 2003. In 2008, the Communauté d'agglomération became a Communauté urbaine, which was joined in 2011 by another 12 municipalities. In 2012, the Communauté urbaine du Grand Toulouse took the name of Toulouse Métropole.

The flag of Toulouse Métropole (photo, photo, photo) is white with the authority's logo.

The original logo was presented during the Community Council held on 31 May 2012 in Toulouse.
The logo is based on the Möbius ring, a surface with only one side discovered by the German mathematician August Ferdinand Möbius (1790-1868).
The Möbius ring, a well-known figure shared by the whole international scientific community, represents the "Knowledge Metropolis", a main component of the identity of the Toulouse region. Moreover, the Möbius ring is the origin of the mathematical symbol representing the concept of infinity*. The infinite loop property characterizing the "ring" conveys here the idea of traffic, movement, dynamism and exchange among men and ideas all over the territory.

Uniting the two "o" of "Toulouse" and "Métropole", the Möbius ring first emphasizes the union and solidarity between the towns forming the metropolis. Its one-sided surface forming an infinite loop also expresses the interdependence of Toulouse and the other towns: no metropolis without Toulouse; Toulouse cannot exist alone without the metropolis.
Interdependence is also highlighted in the colors of the "ring": Toulouse's pink** fades very progressively and harmoniously in the historical color of the Communauté urbaine, orange, but the meeting point of the two colors cannot be clearly established. The fading of the two colors symbolizes here union and perfect convergence.
[Le Blog des Institutionnels, 1 June 2012]

* Pitifully, this erudite description is flawed, which is quite ironic for a "Knowledge Metropolis". First, the Möbius ring is indeed known as the Möbius strip or band; second, more important, the first use of the infinity symbol (lemniscate) is credited to the English mathematician John Wallis (De sectionibus conicis, 1655), more than one century before Möbius' birth.
** Toulouse is nicknamed The Pink Town after the color of the buildings of the historical downtown. Hardly involved in the industrial revolution in the 19th century, Toulouse kept a very homogeneous downtown, characterized by its traditional buildings erected with bricks and roofed with tiles.

Olivier Touzeau & Ivan Sache, 20 January 2019