You should treat the two as separate apps and either try to create a data 
bridge between the two (with CakePHP reading from userCake), or transfer 
all your users from userCake to CakePHP and have a single app.

It also depends on your app's goals. CakePHP has an easily extendable Users 
plugin you could start off with. But don't mix the two if you don't really 
know what you are doing.

On the plus side, you could easily replicate the userCake SQL schema and 
data in CakePHP by connecting Cake to the database and using command line *$ 
cake bake* to replicate the data structure, since userCake uses table and 
field naming conventions also present in Cake.

CakePHP is also much much stronger on the security side of things.

If you really wish to use both, you should put the userCake folder inside 
the app/webroot folder and access it from myapp.url/userCake/ . Just make 
sure you use different table prefixes to avoid them from clashing.

Happy coding!

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