Houston vs San Antonio: Walkability Compared
Houston, TX and San Antonio, TX, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Houston
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
America's fourth-largest city with expanding METRORail, growing bike-share programs, and targeted walkability improvements in key urban corridors.
What works:
- METRORail light rail operates 3 lines connecting downtown, the Medical Center, and surrounding neighborhoods
- No zoning code has created pockets of organic mixed-use density in areas like Montrose and the Heights
- Hermann Park and Buffalo Bayou Park provide significant car-free walking paths through the inner city
- Houston B-Cycle bike share and expanding protected lanes support car-lite living in select areas
Transit: METRO operates 3 METRORail light rail lines (Red, Green/Purple) and an extensive bus network including park-and-ride express routes. Houston is one of the largest US cities by area, which makes full transit coverage hard.
What pulls walkability down:
- Houston's 670 square mile footprint and lack of zoning make it one of the most sprawling and car-dependent major US cities
- Extreme heat, humidity, and frequent flooding events (especially post-hurricanes) create serious barriers to year-round walking
San Antonio
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
San Antonio's famous River Walk creates a unique walkable corridor downtown, but beyond that core the city is largely car-dependent sprawl.
What works:
- The River Walk is a world-renowned pedestrian corridor along the San Antonio River
- Downtown has a compact grid with historic missions connected by trail
- The Howard W. Peak Greenway Trails system spans over 80 miles
- VIA Metropolitan Transit is expanding bus rapid transit
Transit: VIA Metropolitan Transit provides bus service across the metro area. VIA Link on-demand microtransit supplements fixed routes. No rail transit currently operates.
What pulls walkability down:
- Extreme summer heat makes walking uncomfortable for much of the year
- Vast suburban sprawl with limited pedestrian infrastructure outside downtown
Houston walkability → · San Antonio walkability →
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