Columbus vs Indianapolis: Walkability Compared
Columbus, OH and Indianapolis, IN, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Columbus
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Columbus has a growing urban core with walkable neighborhoods, but as Ohio's largest city it remains predominantly car-oriented with limited transit.
What works:
- Short North Arts District is a thriving walkable corridor north of downtown
- Ohio State University campus area is highly walkable
- Columbus has invested in multi-use trail network including the Olentangy Trail
- German Village features brick streets and one of the largest privately funded historic districts in the US
Transit: COTA operates a bus-only system with the CMAX bus rapid transit line on Cleveland Avenue. Columbus is the largest US city without passenger rail transit.
What pulls walkability down:
- No rail transit limits connectivity between walkable nodes
- Rapid outward growth continues to prioritize car-centric suburban development
Indianapolis
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Indianapolis has a walkable downtown anchored by Monument Circle and the Cultural Trail, but its consolidated city-county layout means most areas require a car.
What works:
- Indianapolis Cultural Trail is an 8-mile urban bike and pedestrian path connecting neighborhoods
- Monument Circle and downtown have a compact, walkable grid
- Mass Ave district offers a vibrant walkable commercial corridor
- IndyGo Red Line BRT launched as the city's first rapid transit
Transit: IndyGo operates the Red Line BRT and a bus network. The Purple and Blue BRT lines are planned to expand the rapid transit system.
What pulls walkability down:
- Consolidated city-county (Unigov) creates a massive low-density footprint
- Most neighborhoods outside the Cultural Trail corridor lack pedestrian infrastructure
Columbus walkability → · Indianapolis walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.