PARIS and Milan are among the cities closest to reaching the urban planning goal of being a "15-minute city", while car-dependent metropolises in the United States and elsewhere lag behind, a worldwide analysis said on Monday.
In fact, the central areas of many cities already meet the definition of a 15 minute-city, which means that residents are within a quarter-hour walk or bike ride from everything they need to a lead a good life, the analysis found.
But even within a city, there are often stark differences between the wealthy inner cities and the urban sprawl on their outskirts, according to the Italian researchers behind the new study.
The concept of the 15-minute city gained traction during the Covid pandemic, when lockdowns put more focus on local neighbourhoods.
It has since been embraced by dozens of mayors around the world — and become the target of conspiracy theorists online.
For the new study, published in the journal Nature Cities, the researchers built an online database looking at roughly 10,000 cities.
They used open source data to map out how far of a walk or cycle residents were from different services, including shops, restaurants, education, exercise and healthcare.
"A lot of people already live in a 15-minute city," study co-author Hygor Piaget Monteiro Melo told AFP.
But it depends on where you look within a city, he said, because of the inequality in access to services between the centre and periphery.
What is clear is that population density is a crucial factor. If enough people live close to each other, it is much easier for them to have easy access to services.
This meant that somewhat smaller yet relatively dense cities such as Italy's Milan or Spain's Barcelona scored well on their map.
When it came to the biggest cities, "Paris is an outlier", lead study author Matteo Bruno said.
The mayor of Paris embraced the concept in 2020, and a "considerable fraction" of the city is below the 15-minute mark, the study said.
Some European cities have a headstart because they were built centuries ago at a time before cars — when basically all towns had to be 15-minute cities, the researchers said.
Cities built more recently with cars specifically in mind — particularly in the US — fared far less well on the map.
Atlanta, in particular, stood out as being a long way from being a 15-minute city.
Future Olympic host Los Angeles also lagged behind most others for walkability, as did several Chinese cities, including Chongqing.
But there is no single, right answer, the researchers said.
"The 15-minute city is often presented as a utopia — it's not," Bruno said.
Americans in sprawled-out cities usually have their own houses and backyards, while Europeans in densely populated cities tend to live in apartments, illustrating the important role played by culture, Bruno said.
And central parts of US cities such as New York, San Francisco and Milwaukee are under the 15-minute threshold.
There has been confusion about the concept in the past, the researchers lamented.
For example, "traffic has nothing to do with the 15-minute city", Bruno said.
In fact, slow traffic could indicate an area is more pedestrian friendly, he added.
Yet it was new "low-traffic zones" in the UK that turned the ire of conspiracy theorists towards 15-minute city proponents.
Confusing the two ideas, online groups including vaccine and climate sceptics falsely claimed that 15-minute cities were part of a secret plot to restrict the movement of citizens.
The Italian researchers, who have themselves been targeted by "Twitter haters", emphasised that nothing about the 15-minute city concept involves confining anyone.
Researcher Carlos Moreno, a high-profile proponent of 15-minute cities, was also "attacked by the worldwide conspiracy mongers," he said.
Moreno welcomed the new study, praising how the idea had swiftly become a topic of interest for researchers the world over.
Last week, Valerie Pecresse, the right-wing head of the greater Paris Ile-de-France area, presented a plan for a 20-minute region, he pointed out.
Bruno said that the 15-minute metric is just one element that makes a good city.
Other parts of the recipe include tackling inequality and segregation, improving public transport, reducing traffic and so on, he said.
* The writer is from AFP
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of the New Straits Times