By Aayush Shah, MEng ’24 (BioE)
The following essay received an honorable mention in this year’s Berkeley MEng op-ed contest. In this contest, Master of Engineering students were challenged to communicate an Engineering-related topic they found interesting to a broad audience of technical and non-technical readers. Note: As opinion pieces, the views shared here are neither an expression of nor endorsed by UC Berkeley or the Fung Institute. Close your eyes, and take a second to imagine a classic European city street.
Recently, however, there has been a clamor for a shift in the way our cities are built, and for good reason.Walkable cities hold many advantages for their residents, increasing overall social and mental health, reducing negative environmental impacts caused by cars, and the economic boost for local businesses. US residents should push their local governments to encourage more walkable city layouts, despite the increased initial costs, due to the undeniable long-term benefits that will follow. One of these long-term benefits is resident health. According to the CDC, heart disease is the leading cause of death in the US, accounting for almost 20% of all deaths throughout the year (Luscher 2023). With this in mind, an emphasis on activities that can reduce obesity and chronic diseases, such as walking or biking, can positively impact people’s future health goals. This is where the implementation of walkable cities comes into play for major US cities. In fact, a study conducted across 24 California cities concluded that there was a direct correlation between walkable street networks and lower diabetes, asthma, obesity, and heart disease rates. Some of these benefits included a 2.4% decrease in residents with high blood pressure, a 1.6% decrease in residents with diabetes, and a 1.8% decrease in obese residents (Marshall, Piatkowski, and Garrick 2014).
In our ever-isolated modern-day society, walkable cities provide a new avenue for meaningful social interaction.By providing organic meeting locations, residents are more incentivized to be in these outdoor spaces, allowing for new connections to be created. With more social interactions, lower noise pollution, and being surrounded by urban green space, we see improved emotional well-being and mental alertness (Roe et al. 2020). Currently, zoning laws are the main cause of this car-centric urban design. By requiring the separation of commercial and residential buildings, we begin to see why city sprawl is so common in the US. In contrast, most, if not all, of Western Europe follows mixed-use zoning laws, allowing for ground-floor commercial spaces and upper-floor residential apartments.


Sources:
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2023. “Leading Causes of Death.” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. January 18, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/leading-causes-of-death.htm.
- Luscher, Dan. 2023. “Access, Not Mobility.” 15-Minute City. July 13, 2023. https://www.15minutecity.com/blog/access.
- Marshall, Wesley E., Daniel P. Piatkowski, and Norman W. Garrick. 2014. “Community Design, Street Networks, and Public Health.” Journal of Transport & Health 1 (4): 326–40. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jth.2014.06.002.
- Project Drawdown. 2020. “Walkable Cities .” Project Drawdown. February 6, 2020. https://drawdown.org/solutions/walkable-cities.
- Ratkay, Steve. 2022. “Mixed-Use Zoning | Westminster, CA.” Www.westminster-Ca.gov. 2022. https://www.westminster-ca.gov/departments/community-development/planning-division/2022-zoning-map-and-code-update/mixed-use-zoning.
- Roe, Jenny, Andrew Mondschein, Chris Neale, Laura Barnes, Medhi Boukhechba, and Stephanie Lopez. 2020. “The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes among Older Adults: A Pilot Study.” Frontiers in Public Health 8 (September). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2020.575946.
- The Climate Reality Project. 2021. “Walkable Cities Can Benefit the Environment, the Economy, and Your Health.” Climate Reality. July 8, 2021. https://www.climaterealityproject.org/blog/walkable-cities-can-benefit-environment-economy-and-your-health.
- United States Environmental Protection Agency. 2021. “Fast Facts on Transportation Greenhouse Gas Emissions.” US EPA. August 27, 2021. https://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/fast-facts-transportation-greenhouse-gas-emissions.
Op-Ed: Our modern-day city is broken was originally published in Berkeley Master of Engineering on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.