Fort Lauderdale vs New York: Walkability Compared
Fort Lauderdale, FL and New York, NY, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Fort Lauderdale
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Fort Lauderdale is a South Florida coastal city with a walkable downtown core (Las Olas, Flagler Village), expanding Brightline higher-speed rail service, and broad car-dependent residential neighborhoods outside the urban grid.
What works:
- Las Olas Boulevard and Flagler Village form a continuous walkable downtown spine with dining, galleries, and pre-war buildings
- Brightline higher-speed rail connects Fort Lauderdale to Miami, West Palm Beach and Orlando
- Sun Trolley shuttles serve the downtown core, beach, and several neighborhoods on short loops
- Riverwalk along the New River provides a continuous waterfront pedestrian path through downtown
Transit: Brightline higher-speed rail, Tri-Rail commuter rail to Miami and West Palm Beach, BCT bus network, Sun Trolley downtown circulator.
What pulls walkability down:
- Broward County arterials carry heavy traffic and rank among the most dangerous in the US for pedestrians
- Most residential neighborhoods outside the downtown grid are spread thin with long blocks and few walking destinations
New York
Walkability tier: Walkable
America's most walkable city, with extensive subway, dense sidewalk networks, and world-class pedestrian infrastructure across five boroughs.
What works:
- Most extensive subway system in the US with 472 stations providing 24/7 service
- Manhattan has one of the highest walk-to-work rates in the country at over 20%
- Dense mixed-use zoning means most daily needs are within a 10-minute walk
- Ongoing streetscape improvements including pedestrian plazas and protected bike lanes
Transit: MTA operates the largest transit system in North America: 472 subway stations across 26 lines with 24/7 service, plus an extensive bus network, commuter rail (LIRR, Metro-North), and the Staten Island Ferry.
What pulls walkability down:
- Aging subway infrastructure leads to frequent service disruptions and accessibility gaps -- only about 28% of stations are ADA-accessible
- Extreme sidewalk crowding in tourist-heavy areas like Midtown creates pedestrian bottlenecks
Fort Lauderdale walkability → · New York walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.