Amsterdam vs Vienna: Walkability Compared
Amsterdam, Netherlands and Vienna, Austria, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Amsterdam
Walkability tier: Walkable
Amsterdam is a global benchmark for walkable, human-scale urban design. Its concentric canal ring layout, traffic-calmed streets, and cycling culture create one of Europe's most pedestrian-friendly environments.
What works:
- Canal ring district is a UNESCO World Heritage Site designed at pedestrian scale
- Over 800 km of bike paths that also serve as traffic-calming for pedestrians
- Woonerven (living streets) prioritize walking over vehicle traffic
- Compact city center where most daily needs are within a 15-minute walk
Transit: GVB operates trams, buses, ferries, and the Metro across Amsterdam, with OV-fiets bike-share at transit hubs.
What pulls walkability down:
- Conflict between pedestrians and high-speed cyclists on shared paths
- Tourist congestion in the city center reduces walkability during peak seasons
Vienna
Walkability tier: Walkable
Vienna consistently ranks among the world's most livable cities, with excellent walkability supported by wide sidewalks, extensive public transit, and well-maintained pedestrian zones throughout the historic center.
What works:
- Innere Stadt is largely car-free with broad pedestrian boulevards
- Social housing policy keeps walkable neighborhoods economically diverse
- Ringstrasse boulevard offers wide, tree-lined pedestrian paths around the historic core
- Over 120 km of pedestrian zones across the city
Transit: Wiener Linien operates the U-Bahn (5 lines), trams (28 lines), and buses covering all 23 districts with high frequency.
What pulls walkability down:
- Some outer districts have car-oriented layouts with limited pedestrian amenities
- Winter conditions with ice can reduce walkability in poorly maintained areas
Amsterdam walkability → · Vienna walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.