English

Car Dependency in Urban Accessibility

Physics and Society 2026-04-02 v1 Computers and Society Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability Applications

Abstract

To achieve net-zero emissions, cities must transition away from reliance on private vehicles. However, car-centric urban growth has transformed the automobile from a convenience tool into a necessity for accessing essential services, creating significant "car dependency". This study introduces a novel Car Dependency Index (CDI) that quantifies the accessibility gap between private and public transport across 18 cities in Europe and North America. Utilising high-resolution geospatial data and numerical simulations, we reveal pronounced spatial inequalities, showing that car dependency remains a primary driver of car ownership even when accounting for income. A ``what-if" simulation of the planned metro expansion in Rome predicts a reduction of approximately 60,000 commuting vehicles, yet highlights that isolated interventions have localised impacts. We conclude that systemic, network-level transit expansions are essential to dismantle car-based systems and foster equitable, sustainable urban mobility. Our framework provides policymakers with an objective, scalable tool to identify viable areas for car-free zones and target infrastructure investments effectively.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2604.01019,
  title  = {Car Dependency in Urban Accessibility},
  author = {Bruno Campanelli and Francesco Marzolla and Matteo Bruno and Hygor Piaget Monteiro Melo and Vittorio Loreto},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.01019},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:48:27.426Z