The cities with the highest share of car-free household are still the ones that excel at the basics of transit and walkability. Image: Tri-State Transportation Campaign
Last week, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group released a ranking of the top 10 cities for "wired" transportation, where newer technologies like bike-share, real-time transit data, and app-based ride-hailing services are helping people get around without a car. After rating 70 metro areas based on the availability of 11 different technologies, Austin came out on top.
Joseph Cutrufo at the Tri-State Transportation Campaign's Mobilizing the Region blog adds some important context today, pointing out that the cities with the most savvy on transportation tech don't necessarily align with the cities seeing a surge in car-free living. Austin, for example, has seen its share of car-free households decline in recent years.
The places where living car-free is most common are still the cities with two basic strengths: good transit and a walkable built environment. "New transportation technology can complement but can't replace transit, density and walkability," Cutrufo says.
Angie is a Cleveland-based writer with a background in planning and newspaper reporting. She has been writing about cities for Streetsblog for six years.
L.A. County needs to embrace physically-protected bikeways, robust traffic calming around schools, and similarly transformative, safety-focused projects