Nearly all the inhabitants of Tenerife live on the lower slopes and within a few miles of the sea. Almost half the population is in or near Santa Cruz de Tenerife, the capital, and San Cristóbal de la Laguna, the former capital, now Tenerife’s cultural capital and the site of the University of La Laguna (1792). The city of San Cristóbal de la Laguna was added to the UNESCO World Heritage site list in 1999 because of its stature as the first nonfortified Spanish colonial town. Most of the island’s other inhabitants live on the intensively cultivated slopes (bananas and vineyards) near the northern coast, where the chief towns are La Orotava, Los Realejos, and Puerto de la Cruz. Near the southern coast, where the climate is drier, dry farming predominates, and camels are common beasts of burden. Towns of the south experienced dramatic growth in the 21st century. The population of Arona, Tenerife’s third largest city, swelled to more than 75,000, and Adeje and Granadilla de Abona expanded dramatically as a result of the tourist trade.
The economy of Tenerife is mainly agricultural. Tourism is based on beach resort facilities, especially in Playa de Las Américas. The international airport at Los Rodeos suffered a catastrophic airplane collision (582 fatalities) in 1977, and in response a new international airport, Queen Sofia Tenerife South, was opened in 1978 in an area less prone to the foggy conditions that had contributed to the 1977 disaster. Area 785 square miles (2,034 square km).