Atlanta vs Nashville: Walkability Compared
Atlanta, GA and Nashville, TN, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Atlanta
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Home of the BeltLine trail and growing MARTA transit, Atlanta is transforming from car-centric sprawl to a more walkable, connected city.
What works:
- The Atlanta BeltLine is a 22-mile loop of trails, parks, and transit converting former rail corridors into walkable connections
- MARTA heavy rail provides 48 stations across 4 lines connecting the airport to Midtown and Buckhead
- Midtown has emerged as a genuinely walkable urban district with new residential towers and Piedmont Park
- Ponce City Market and Krog Street Market have created walkable food hall destinations along the BeltLine
Transit: MARTA operates heavy rail (Red, Gold, Blue, Green lines with 48 stations) and an extensive bus network. The Atlanta Streetcar runs a short downtown loop. BeltLine transit is planned but not yet built.
What pulls walkability down:
- Most of the metro area outside Midtown and a few intown neighborhoods is deeply car-dependent with wide, dangerous arterial roads
- Missing sidewalks are pervasive in many Atlanta neighborhoods, forcing pedestrians to walk in the road or on unpaved shoulders
Nashville
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
A booming Sun Belt city with a walkable downtown core and emerging transit plans to improve pedestrian access across rapidly developing neighborhoods.
What works:
- Broadway / Lower Broadway honky-tonk district is a lively pedestrian destination in the city center
- The Gulch neighborhood is a LEED-certified walkable urban district built on former rail yards
- 12South and East Nashville are emerging as walkable neighborhood commercial corridors
- WeGo Star commuter rail and bus service provide basic transit, with expansion plans in development
Transit: WeGo Public Transit operates bus routes and the WeGo Star commuter rail line. Nashville lacks any rail rapid transit. A 2018 transit referendum for light rail was defeated, leaving the city reliant on buses and cars.
What pulls walkability down:
- No rail rapid transit and limited bus service make car ownership essentially required outside the downtown core
- Rapid growth has outpaced pedestrian infrastructure investment, with many new developments lacking sidewalk connections
Atlanta walkability → · Nashville walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.