Boston vs Orlando: Walkability Compared
Boston, MA and Orlando, 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
Orlando
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Orlando is a fast-growing Florida metro built around theme parks and a wide car-oriented road network, with walkable pockets in the Mills 50, Thornton Park, College Park and downtown core neighborhoods.
What works:
- Downtown Orlando + Lake Eola Park form a continuously walkable civic and dining core
- Mills 50, Thornton Park and College Park are dense, sidewalk-rich neighborhoods with independent shops
- SunRail commuter rail provides north-south rail service from DeBary through downtown to Poinciana
- Brightline higher-speed rail now connects Orlando to South Florida (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach)
Transit: LYNX bus network (90+ routes), SunRail commuter rail (north-south spine), LYMMO downtown BRT loop, Brightline higher-speed rail to South Florida.
What pulls walkability down:
- Orange County roads are among the deadliest in the US for pedestrians; many arterials lack continuous sidewalks or safe crossings
- Theme-park-driven sprawl puts most residential growth far from any walkable core or transit line
Boston walkability → · Orlando walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.