Cars aren’t the only way we move through the places where we live, work, and play. Today, more and more cities and neighborhood associations are focusing on walkability, or more generally, how people move around an area without the use of a personal vehicle.We’ve created this guide to help you learn about the benefits of walkability, many of which may surprise you. So read on to learn more about walkability and how it benefits both our personal pocketbooks and our society.
What is walkability?
It may seem obvious that the term “walkability” refers to the ways in which an area serves pedestrians. After all, the word is quite literally walk + ability.
In reality, walkability involves a lot more than actual walking.
Harvard architect Ann Forsyth explains that “in professional, research, and public debates the term [walkability] is used to refer to several quite different kinds of phenomena.” What exactly are these phenomena?
Forsyth goes on to explain that some discussions of walkability:
“Focus on environmental features or means of making walkable environments… Others deal with outcomes potentially fostered by such environments … Finally some use the term walkability as a proxy for better design whether composed of multiple, measurable dimensions or providing a holistic solution to urban problems.”
As you can see from the above definition, walkability means the ability for movement within a given area, usually a city or a neighborhood. And several stakeholders — including city planners and zoning commissions, residents and business owners — must come together to ensure an area’s walkability.