Baltimore vs Philadelphia: Walkability Compared
Baltimore, MD and Philadelphia, PA, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Baltimore
Walkability tier: Moderate
Baltimore is one of the more walkable mid-Atlantic cities, with a compact urban form, historic rowhouse neighborhoods, and a waterfront promenade.
What works:
- Dense rowhouse neighborhoods create a highly walkable urban fabric
- Inner Harbor promenade offers continuous waterfront walking
- Light rail and Metro subway provide rail transit options
- Compact city footprint means many destinations are within walking distance
Transit: MTA Maryland operates a Metro subway line, light rail, commuter rail (MARC), and buses. The BaltimoreLink bus redesign improved frequency on key corridors.
What pulls walkability down:
- Significant neighborhood inequality in pedestrian infrastructure quality
- Some areas have high vacancy rates that reduce street-level activity and perceived safety
Philadelphia
Walkability tier: Walkable
America's first planned city with a walkable grid layout, extensive SEPTA transit, and pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods like Center City and Old City.
What works:
- William Penn's original grid plan from 1682 created one of America's most logically walkable street networks
- Center City is the second-largest downtown in the US by employment, all within a compact walkable area
- SEPTA runs subway, trolley, bus, and regional rail across the city and inner suburbs
- Relatively affordable housing in walkable neighborhoods compared to peer cities like NYC and Boston
Transit: SEPTA operates 2 subway lines (Broad Street and Market-Frankford), trolley routes, an extensive bus network, and 13 regional rail lines. The city also has a growing network of protected bike lanes.
What pulls walkability down:
- Significant walkability disparity between Center City and outer neighborhoods like Northeast Philly where sidewalk gaps are common
- Deferred infrastructure maintenance leaves many sidewalks in poor condition with cracked pavement and missing curb cuts
Baltimore walkability → · Philadelphia walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.