A recent study of mode share (the % share of transportation trips by car, transit, walking, biking etc) relative to city size and income levels in almost 800 cities in 61 countries.
Data corresponding to 794 cities, with a combined population of almost 850 million people, is used to model the vast heterogeneities in the way people move in cities.
Some urban areas rely heavily on cars, with less than 10% of their journeys on alternative modes of transport (either walking, cycling or Public Transport), whilst in other cities, less than one in four journeys are by car. Among the 794 cities, 22.4% of the journeys are Active mobility, 26.2% are Public Transport, and 51.4% are by Car.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412024001272


Wondering what European city that is just south of the “Dhaka” text.
How about that sub-saharan city where 90% walk everywhere, also an outlier.
It’s a shame that the source didn’t publish raw data
https://citiesmoving.com/visualizations/
I’m not sure if the question “How do you travel to work?” paints a complete picture.
I live in the Netherlands, and like many fellow countrymen I commute to work by car because it is the most convenient option. But other trips I make on a daily basis are usually either on foot or by bike, and if I go somewhere in the weekend I regularly take the train.
Exactly what I was gonna point out. I travel my transit to work, but my wife uses the car just because it’s super convenient and closer. But on 50% of trips together we transit and 40% is car, and 10% is walking to our local breweries or bars.
I think this is only work data, which isn’t a great picture.
Reading through the paper, I think this is the raw data https://github.com/rafaelprietocuriel/ModalShare/blob/main/ModalShare.csv
Ugh I already have too many projects and too little free time but making that chart interactive sounds cool…
Turns out you can find interactive visualizations of the data here https://citiesmoving.com/visualizations/ 🎉
Venice?
My guess would be either London, Paris or BerlinEdit: I think I misunderstood which data point you were referring to