Kansas City vs Omaha: Walkability Compared
Kansas City, MO and Omaha, NE, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Kansas City
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Kansas City offers a free streetcar line downtown and walkable districts like the Country Club Plaza, but its sprawling metro area is largely car-dependent.
What works:
- KC Streetcar is free to ride and connects the River Market to Union Station
- Country Club Plaza is a walkable outdoor shopping district modeled after Seville
- The streetcar extension south to UMKC is expanding the walkable transit corridor
- Crossroads Arts District is a dense, walkable creative hub
Transit: KCATA operates the RideKC bus system and the free KC Streetcar. The streetcar is expanding southward along Main Street to UMKC.
What pulls walkability down:
- Extreme sprawl across the state line creates a vast, car-dependent metro
- Many neighborhoods lack basic sidewalk infrastructure
Omaha
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Omaha has a revitalized Old Market district and growing downtown, but as a mid-sized Great Plains city it remains largely car-oriented.
What works:
- Old Market is a cobblestone warehouse district with excellent walkability
- The ORBT bus rapid transit line connects downtown to Westroads along Dodge Street
- Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge connects Omaha to Council Bluffs across the Missouri River
- Midtown Crossing is a walkable mixed-use development near UNMC
Transit: Metro Transit operates the ORBT BRT line on Dodge Street and a bus network. Service frequency is limited outside the ORBT corridor.
What pulls walkability down:
- Cold winters and hot summers create seasonal walkability challenges
- Low density and wide roads make most areas outside the core car-dependent
Kansas City walkability → · Omaha walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.