The following is a list of United States incorporated places with at least 5,000 workers with the 25 highest rates of pedestrian commuting (walking to work) (pedestrian mode share), according to data from the 2019 American Community Survey,[1] five-year average. The Census Bureau, through the American Community Survey, measured the percentage of commuters who walk to work, as opposed to bicycling, taking public transit, driving an automobile, boat, or some other means.
Rank | City | Pedestrian commuters as % of population (2019) |
---|---|---|
1 | Ithaca, New York | 36.12% |
2 | State College, Pennsylvania | 33.77% |
3 | Athens, Ohio | 32.12% |
4 | North Chicago, Illinois | 28.75% |
5 | West Lafayette, Indiana | 24.74% |
6 | Cambridge, Massachusetts | 24.24% |
7 | Oneonta, New York | 22.56% |
8 | Oxford, Ohio | 22.56% |
9 | Burlington, Vermont | 22.21% |
10 | Columbia, South Carolina | 21.86% |
11 | Pullman, Washington | 20.94% |
12 | Bremerton, Washington | 19.56% |
13 | College Park, Maryland | 19.33% |
14 | Meadville, Pennsylvania | 19.27% |
15 | Moscow, Idaho | 18.91% |
16 | East Lansing, Michigan | 18.76% |
17 | Atlantic City, New Jersey | 18.55% |
18 | Indiana, Pennsylvania | 18.22% |
19 | Whitewater, Wisconsin | 17.27% |
20 | Morgantown, West Virginia | 17.23% |
21 | Ellensburg, Washington | 17.16% |
22 | Twentynine Palms, California | 16.88% |
23 | Arcata, California | 16.56% |
24 | Berkeley, California | 16.54% |
25 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | 16.52% |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ US Census Bureau (2019). "SEX OF WORKERS BY MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION TO WORK (B08006) - All places". data.census.gov. Retrieved 2022-01-04.