Los Angeles vs Orlando: Walkability Compared
Los Angeles, CA and Orlando, FL, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Los Angeles
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
A sprawling metropolis working to improve walkability through Metro expansion, road diets, and Vision Zero programs across diverse neighborhoods.
What works:
- Metro system is expanding rapidly with new rail lines including the Regional Connector and Purple Line extension
- Several neighborhoods like DTLA, Santa Monica, and Koreatown are genuinely walkable despite the city's car-centric reputation
- Vision Zero initiative is investing in pedestrian safety improvements on the city's most dangerous corridors
- Year-round mild weather is ideal for walking when infrastructure supports it
Transit: LA Metro operates 6 rail lines (A, B, C, D, E, K) and an extensive bus network. The system is undergoing massive expansion ahead of the 2028 Olympics, including the Purple Line extension to Westwood and the Airport Metro Connector.
What pulls walkability down:
- Vast sprawl and car-oriented infrastructure make most of the city functionally unwalkable, with wide stroads and missing sidewalks in many areas
- LA has one of the highest pedestrian fatality rates among major US cities, with arterial roads particularly dangerous
Orlando
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Orlando is a fast-growing Florida metro built around theme parks and a wide car-oriented road network, with walkable pockets in the Mills 50, Thornton Park, College Park and downtown core neighborhoods.
What works:
- Downtown Orlando + Lake Eola Park form a continuously walkable civic and dining core
- Mills 50, Thornton Park and College Park are dense, sidewalk-rich neighborhoods with independent shops
- SunRail commuter rail provides north-south rail service from DeBary through downtown to Poinciana
- Brightline higher-speed rail now connects Orlando to South Florida (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach)
Transit: LYNX bus network (90+ routes), SunRail commuter rail (north-south spine), LYMMO downtown BRT loop, Brightline higher-speed rail to South Florida.
What pulls walkability down:
- Orange County roads are among the deadliest in the US for pedestrians; many arterials lack continuous sidewalks or safe crossings
- Theme-park-driven sprawl puts most residential growth far from any walkable core or transit line
Los Angeles walkability → · Orlando walkability →
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