Can a neighborhood really function as a "15-minute city"? Researchers put the concept to the test by analyzing travel patterns in nearly 200 transit station communities across the Portland and Washington metropolitan areas. Using large-scale mobility data and machine learning, they found that access to jobs - not mixed-use development or car ownership - is the strongest predictor of people staying local. With more than 86% of neighborhood trips made on foot, the findings offer new evidence that

More Jobs, More Local Living: FAU Study Redefines the 15-Minute City
Florida Atlantic University
