L.A. among most walkable major cities?

Walk Score quantifies mantra: location, location, location

Inman News

Los Angeles skylineLos Angeles skyline

The cliché about Los Angeles is that you can't get anywhere without a car. But a computer algorithm that doesn't deal in clichés has identified the cultural capital of the Left Coast as one of the 10 most walkable major U.S. cities -- beating out hipster locales like Austin, Texas, and Charlotte, N.C.

Residents of those cities may beg to differ with the results, but an automated analysis of the walkability of 2,508 neighborhoods in the 40 most populous U.S. cities by the Web site Walk Score should at least get their attention.

Walk Score seeks to promote walkable communities by helping guide the decisions of house and apartment hunters. Thanks to higher gas prices and word of mouth, the site has seen a threefold increase in traffic this year (see previous story).

Parent company Front Seat is looking to collaborate with real estate brokers and listing sites, offering a Walk Score tile that agents can embed on their Web sites as a tool for assessing the walkability of neighborhoods around their listings.

Mike Mathieu, founder and chairman of the Seattle-based "civic software" developer, says he envisions a day when every property listing includes not only the number of bedrooms and bathrooms, but a Walk Score.

Today's release of the most walkable major U.S. cities is intended to spread the word about the site, not shame the cities that didn't score well. There are pockets of walkability within each city, Mathieu said, and Walk Score has generated a list of 138 neighborhoods that are a "walker's paradise" because most errands can be accomplished without a car.

Interactive heat maps for all 40 cities analyzed help Walk Score users see how walkability varies in different neighborhoods within each city's boundaries.

"The story here is really that, by using these interactive walkability maps, you can find these oases of walkability in any city," Mathieu said. Even Jacksonville, Fla., which scored last among major cities in Walk Score's analysis, has them, he said.

The interactive maps and neighborhood scores were previously only available in Front Seat's home town of Seattle.

Outside of Seattle and the 39 other big U.S. cities where Walk Score now offers interactive maps, typing in an address generates a walkability score between zero and 100 for the area around an individual property.

The Walk Score algorithm identifies the closest grocery stores, restaurants, coffee shops and other amenities within easy walking distance of any given address. For the 40-city rankings, neighborhood boundaries defined by Zillow were weighted by population and assigned a Walk Score.

While there are bound to be debates about the results of the rankings, the scores will be hard to dismiss out of hand because they are based on objective rather than subjective criteria.

"It's almost surprising to think that the standard mantra in real estate is location, location, location, but it's never been quantified before," Mathieu said. "I remember when I bought my house you do that little walk around the neighborhood, but it's hard to know what's there."

In many ways, the scores are unsurprising, with the top five spots taken by densely populated cities: San Francisco (86), New York (83), Boston (79), Chicago (76) and Philadelphia (74). Walk Score analyzed only the area within city limits, rather than larger metropolitan statistical areas.

Cities at the bottom of the list typically have more land dedicated to suburban-style, single-family tracts and less mixed-use development. Trailing Jacksonville with the lowest walkability score of 36 were Nashville (39), Charlotte, N.C. (39), Indianapolis (42) and Oklahoma City (43).

According to Walk Score, a score of 90 to 100 indicates a "walker's paradise" where most errands can be accomplished without a car -- a rating achieved by less than 6 percent of the 2,508 neighborhoods analyzed.

Although nine of the top 10 walkable neighborhoods were in New York and San Francisco, Kansas City's Old Westport district enabled the heartland to break into the top 10 with a score of 99. But Kansas City's Walk Score of 44 placed it near the bottom of the list of major U.S. cities -- demonstrating Mathieu's point that oases of walkability can be found anywhere.

Front Seat's stated goal as a company is to connect people to the places they live, the resources they consume, and their communities. Mathieu said Walk Score's algorithm could easily be adapted to evaluate the ease of getting around a neighborhood or city on a bicycle by awarding points for businesses that are too far to walk but within biking range (Front Seat already owns the BikeScore.com domain, he said).

While the Walk Score algorithm could also be used to score businesses within driving range, that's not a project that holds the same appeal to Mathieu, the former general manager of Microsoft's MSN.com and a partner in the philanthropically oriented Social Venture Partners.

For many people, work is the most important destination that involves a car trip, he said. As Mathieu sees it, "The Walk Score equivalent for driving would be more like, 'Find me a job that's close to my house.' "

But Front Seat's collaboration with Zillow in the neighborhood rankings project could foreshadow further collaboration with listing sites.

At least one condo developer is already advertising Walk Scores as part of their marketing efforts, he said, and while Walk Score has no intention of becoming a listing site Mathieu hinted at future partnerships with listing sites, MLSs, brokers or agents.

"We would love to do the public a service by making sure our users don't get repetitive stress injury typing their listings into the site," Mathieu said. Walk Score's embeddable real estate tile is already generating about 20 percent of the site's traffic, he said, and users in the United States, Canada and United Kingdom have scored more than 2 million addresses.

"Whether it's gas prices, environmental issues or health benefits, walkability has definitely become a buzzword in real estate," Mathieu said.

According to a recent Harris Interactive poll commissioned by Move Inc., proximity to daily conveniences like stores and services is the second-most desirable characteristic to home and apartment hunters looking for a place to live, second only to crime rates (see story).

Mathieu will be one of seven speakers on a July 24 panel at Inman Real Estate Connect San Francisco, "Seven New Ideas That Will Change Real Estate," where he said he'll talk more about how Walk Score can be of use to real estate professionals.

Walk Score top 10 cities*

Rank

City/Score

Most Walkable Neighborhoods

1)

San Francisco (86)

Chinatown, Financial District, Downtown

2)

New York (83)

Tribeca, Little Italy, Soho

3)

Boston (79)

Back Bay-Beacon Hill, South End, Fenway-Kenmore

4)

Chicago (76)

Loop, Near North Side, Lincoln Park

5)

Philadelphia (74)

City Center East, City Center West, Riverfront

6)

Seattle (72)

Pioneer Square, Downtown, First Hill

7)

Washington, D.C. (70)

Dupont Circle, Logan Circle, Downtown

8)

Long Beach, CA (69)

Downtown, Belmont Shore, Belmont Heights

9)

Los Angeles (67)

Mid City West, Downtown, Hollywood

10)

Portland, OR (66)

Pearl District, Old Town-Chinatown, Downtown

Source: Walk Score analysis of the 40 largest U.S. cities

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What's your opinion? Leave your comments below or send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer, click the byline at the top of the story.

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Submitted by Nick Bastian on July 17, 2008 - 11:22am.

I enjoy the walk score app for checking out neighborhoods. With the price of gas, it has become much more relevant for people choosing a new community.
Glad to be heading to San Fran next week for Inman Connect. I'm not even going to need a car! :-)

www.RailLife.com/blog

 
Submitted by Stacey Pfeifer on July 17, 2008 - 4:51pm.

Mike-- thank you for Walkscore! For almost a year i think we've been advising our clients at Number1Expert.com to add a Walkscore link to each listing by first getting the score for the listing and posting that url under "Special Links" on the listing detail page. The tile doesn't fit on our listings page, but we encourage adding it to other pages on the site.

We're also checking out and starting to advocate www.costofcommuting.com
- a widget that will calculate a commute. It's not as easy to use as Walkscore but it could be valuable for home buyers visiting an agent's website. Hopefully between the two they'll be interested enough to stick around and play!

We LOVE Walkscore-- it totally rocks!

I'll also add a link to this article in our Tips under the Walkscore section. We LOVE Inman too!!

 
Submitted by Christine Donovan - Costa Mesa Real Estate on July 17, 2008 - 10:01pm.

Based on what Walk Score is ranking, it makes sense that there are some neighborhoods in LA that rank well. It is a densely populated area in many places. The car is necessary if you are travelling a distance. However, when I lived there, we walked to many places.

Website: Costa Mesa Real Estate
Blog: Costa Mesa Real Estate Blog

 
Submitted by Eric Bouler on July 18, 2008 - 8:08pm.

Eric Bouler
Prudential Gardner
New Orleans,La.
www.neworleanscondotrends.com

Neat tool that gives you some results that you may already know. The areas that scored high for my area were the old neighborhoods that were around before cars. It made sense as many people do walk a lot here.

Walking on Bourbon Street makes common sense.

 
Submitted by Darren Capps on July 19, 2008 - 2:37pm.

living in los angeles I must say that the city is in no way walkable. That is unless you get drunk enough not to realize you are hoofing it over mountains and valleys, stepping over bums and running from hookers....

www.bannedinhollywood.com

 
Submitted by Steve Simon on July 20, 2008 - 5:34am.

Walkable and Tampa Bay Florida only go together for about three months out of the year, if that...
The temp. during the day in the Sun for the last three weeks has averaged about 102 degrees. Of course it was a little lower when it rained for 2 and 1/2 of those three weeks, but then when the Sun comes back out the humidity gives you a heat index of 110 and they post warnings for Seniors to stay inside (That is the summer and it can be from the end of May to October).
The winter has a few cold (to us:) dyas in Jan. and Feb. but most days would be walkable as far as temp. is concerned, but alas the Planners saw the temp.s in the summer and they just put walls around most communities, nothing connects and there are very few joint access roads.
I sat on a County Commission Board for eight years fighting for the appropriate things only to voted down by the NIMBY fearing Iwant to stay elected majority. Even when they knew it was the wrong thing to do, they would fold like a cheap card table to whatever "Mob De Jour" was in front of them...
There is no walkability where I live :(

If the answer to a complex problem is very simple, it is usually incomplete...
Steve Simon is the lead instructor at the Steve Simon School of Real Estate www.stevesimon.us

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