Walking Parque de la 93 in Bogota
Upscale area centered on a park with surrounding restaurants, shops, and walkable residential blocks.
Why Parque de la 93 sits inside a walkable city
Parque de la 93 inherits the broader walkability conditions of Bogota, Colombia. Citywide factors that shape what walking here actually feels like:
- TransMilenio BRT carries 2.2 million daily riders across 12 trunk lines, one of the world's largest BRT systems
- Ciclovia closes 120+ km of roads every Sunday for pedestrians and cyclists, a model copied worldwide
- La Candelaria historic center has narrow colonial streets with high pedestrian density and cultural landmarks
- Bogota's cicloruta network spans 550+ km of protected bike paths, many usable by pedestrians
What to check before you walk here
Drop a specific address into SafeStreets to see how it scores on the four components we measure: Daily Reach (7 service categories within a 15-minute walk), Street Safety (vehicle speeds, intersections, crossings, sidewalks), Transit Reach (rail, bus, multi-modal), and Walking Comfort (tree canopy, terrain slope, air quality).
Getting around from Parque de la 93
TransMilenio BRT (12 trunk lines), SITP feeder buses, Metro Line 1 under construction, cicloruta bike network.
What can pull walkability down in Bogota
- Altitude (2,640m) and air quality from diesel buses affect walking comfort for some
- Pedestrian safety varies dramatically between neighborhoods, with some areas unsafe after dark
Other walkable neighborhoods in Bogota
La Candelaria. Historic colonial center with narrow streets, universities, museums, and dense foot traffic.
Usaquen. Former village with pedestrianized plaza, Sunday flea market, and restaurant-lined streets.
Chapinero. Dense mixed-use district with Zona G dining, Zona T entertainment, and TransMilenio connectivity.
Analyze an address in Parque de la 93 →
Back to all of Bogota · All city walkability guides
Built by Streets & Commons.