Boston vs Miami: Walkability Compared
Boston, MA and Miami, FL, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Boston
Walkability tier: Walkable
One of America's oldest and most walkable cities, with narrow colonial-era streets, the Freedom Trail, and compact historic neighborhoods.
What works:
- Compact historic street layout predating the automobile makes walking the natural way to get around
- America's oldest subway system (the T) connects dense neighborhoods across the metro area
- High concentration of universities creates a strong pedestrian culture year-round
- The Emerald Necklace park system provides miles of connected green walking paths
Transit: MBTA (the T) operates 4 subway/light rail lines (Red, Orange, Blue, Green), commuter rail, bus network, and ferry services. The Green Line is the oldest light rail system in the US, recently extended to Somerville.
What pulls walkability down:
- Aging MBTA infrastructure causes frequent delays and service disruptions, with ongoing reliability concerns
- Narrow colonial-era sidewalks lack ADA compliance in many historic areas and become hazardous in winter ice
Miami
Walkability tier: Moderate
A rapidly growing city with improving Metrorail and Metromover, walkable districts like Brickell and Wynwood, and unique heat and flooding challenges.
What works:
- Brickell and downtown have seen massive residential density growth, creating genuine walk-to-work neighborhoods
- Free Metromover people mover circulates through downtown and Brickell with 21 stations
- Wynwood and Design District have transformed into walkable arts and retail destinations
- Miami Beach's Art Deco district and Lincoln Road Mall are iconic pedestrian environments
Transit: Miami-Dade Transit operates Metrorail (2 lines, 23 stations), the free Metromover downtown circulator, and Metrobus. Brightline high-speed rail connects to Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach from MiamiCentral station.
What pulls walkability down:
- Extreme heat and humidity from May through October make walking uncomfortable and potentially dangerous without shade and hydration
- Sea-level rise and tidal flooding increasingly inundate sidewalks and streets in low-lying areas like Miami Beach and Brickell
Boston walkability → · Miami walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.