Singapore vs Tokyo: Walkability Compared
Singapore, Singapore and Tokyo, Japan, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Singapore
Walkability tier: Walkable
Singapore combines tropical urbanism with world-class transit connectivity. Covered walkways, air-conditioned malls, and MRT stations create a climate-adapted pedestrian network throughout the island city-state.
What works:
- Sheltered walkway network connects MRT stations to HDB housing blocks
- Car ownership restrictions keep vehicle density low relative to population
- HDB town centers designed with daily amenities within walking distance
- Gardens by the Bay and park connectors create green walking corridors
Transit: SMRT and SBS Transit operate 6 MRT lines, 3 LRT lines, and an extensive bus network across the island.
What pulls walkability down:
- Tropical heat and humidity make unsheltered walking uncomfortable year-round
- Some industrial and expressway areas create barriers to pedestrian connectivity
Tokyo
Walkability tier: Walkable
Tokyo combines ultra-efficient rail transit with dense, walkable station neighborhoods. Each station area functions as a self-contained village with shops, restaurants, and services within a short walking radius.
What works:
- Station-centered development creates walkable micro-cities at hundreds of rail stops
- Exceptionally low crime rate makes walking safe at all hours
- Shotengai (covered shopping streets) provide weather-protected pedestrian corridors
- Strict zoning mixes residential and commercial use for short daily walking trips
Transit: Tokyo Metro, Toei Subway, JR East, and private railways operate over 280 stations across the 23 special wards.
What pulls walkability down:
- Some arterial roads lack adequate sidewalks in outer wards
- Extreme pedestrian congestion at major station hubs during rush hours
Singapore walkability → · Tokyo walkability →
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