Denver vs Phoenix: Walkability Compared
Denver, CO and Phoenix, AZ, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Denver
Walkability tier: Moderate
The Mile High City combines a walkable downtown core with expanding light rail and growing Complete Streets initiatives across the metro area.
What works:
- RTD light rail and commuter rail provide 60+ miles of rail transit connecting the metro area and airport
- 16th Street Mall is a mile-long pedestrian and transit corridor in the heart of downtown
- RiNo Art District and South Broadway are emerging as dense, walkable mixed-use corridors
- 300 days of sunshine per year and flat terrain make walking comfortable in most seasons
Transit: RTD operates 8 rail lines (light rail and commuter rail) including the A Line to Denver International Airport, plus extensive bus service. Union Station serves as the central multimodal hub.
What pulls walkability down:
- Rapid suburban sprawl beyond the walkable core creates a stark divide between central Denver and car-dependent outer areas
- Wide arterial roads like Colorado Boulevard and Federal Boulevard remain hostile to pedestrians despite improvement efforts
Phoenix
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
A sprawling desert city with Valley Metro light rail and unique heat challenges that make shade, tree cover, and pedestrian infrastructure critical.
What works:
- Valley Metro light rail runs 28 miles connecting downtown Phoenix, Tempe, and Mesa with growing ridership
- Roosevelt Row arts district and downtown are investing in shade structures and pedestrian improvements
- Tempe Town Lake and canal paths provide some car-free walking infrastructure through the metro
- City has invested in cool pavement coatings and shade programs to make walking more survivable in extreme heat
Transit: Valley Metro operates light rail (28 miles connecting Phoenix, Tempe, and Mesa) and a bus network. South Central and Northwest extensions are expanding rail coverage. However, most of the 517-square-mile city remains far from any rail station.
What pulls walkability down:
- Life-threatening summer heat regularly exceeding 115 degrees makes walking genuinely dangerous for months, with documented heat-related pedestrian fatalities
- Massive block sizes (often a quarter mile between intersections) and wide multi-lane arterials create an inherently hostile pedestrian environment
Denver walkability → · Phoenix walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.