Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Image: ARUP
Image: ARUP
false

The way we move around is shaped by many factors -- the physical environment, culture, technology, and economic status, to name a few. A new report from the engineering firm Arup, "Cities Alive: Towards a Walking World," looks at how motorized cities can become walkable again.

Brandon Donnelly at Network blog Architect This City lifted this image from the report, which shows where walking and driving rates stand today in cities around the world:

The turquoise circles represent % of journeys by walking. On the left is Los Angeles at 4%. And on the right is Istanbul at 48%.

The red circles represent % of journeys by car. On the left is Miami at 79% (with Los Angeles right beside it). And on the right is Kolkata at 2%.

The map in the middle of the circles represents pedestrians killed in traffic crashes per 100,000 people.

I’m not sure where the data was drawn from, but it’s not all that surprising to see a few North American cities clustered towards the left (less walking; more driving).

North America clearly stand out as a car-dependent part of the globe. Any other patterns emerge?

Elsewhere on the Network today: Pedestrian Observations considers how transit agencies might successfully combine "radial" and "circumferential" routes. And World Streets asserts that achieving full gender parity in transportation decision making bodies would be transformative for cities.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Tuesday’s Headlines

Traffic returns, protests continue, Highway 1 Is...Wait a second, does that say a baby fell out of an SUV window?

January 27, 2026

What’s A Transportation Reformer’s Role In the Fight Against ICE Violence?

Migrants and protestors are being killed in the streets by ICE agents. What should transportation reform advocates do?

January 26, 2026

Hearing Held on Extending the Central Subway

It's a big lift. But Supervisor Sauter wants SFMTA to keep it on the agenda.

January 26, 2026

Eyes on the Street: 6th Street Viaduct ‘PARC’ Construction

Sixth Street PARC - Park, Arts, River & Connectivity - construction is nearly complete, and expected to finish this year.

January 26, 2026

Los Angeles Anti–Housing Law Push Escalates as Metro Board Seeks SB 79 Exemption

Metro staff warn that state law facilitating transit-oriented housing could “harm transit expansion... by galvanizing housing opponents against new light rail stations and dedicated bus lanes.”

January 26, 2026

Monday’s Headlines

People are fed up with ICE and unsafe streets.

January 26, 2026
See all posts