Rethinking Walkways as Public Open Space in Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia: A Spatial Equity and Quality Assessment Framework
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Date
2026
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Urban development in Saudi Arabia has traditionally prioritized vehicular mobility while
downplaying the importance of pedestrian activity. Contributing factors to the prioritization of the
vehicle over the pedestrian include low-density development, auto-centric urban streets,
inexpensive fuel, pervasive air conditioning, and an ingrained dependence on private vehicles.
This has often made walking in Saudi Arabian cities inconvenient, unsafe, and limited to indoor
environments.
In cities throughout Saudi Arabia, the development of walkways was initiated primarily as an
urban intervention to provide space for residents to walk for exercise and recreation. Walkways
have been implemented across Saudi cities under municipal urban campaigns, reinforced by
several ambitious policies, programs, and initiatives, such as the “Humanizing the City”
initiative—a recent effort by Riyadh Municipality to promote more people-centered environments
and activate the public realm to improve residents’ quality of life. These walkways are wide,
longitudinal spaces intended to provide secure, comfortable, and attractive pedestrian
environments. They are often built over street medians or along major arterials and are supported
with sidewalk furniture such as benches, lighting, and landscape elements. Although these
walkways offer relatively safe spaces for pedestrians, they are often disconnected from sidewalk
networks and face accessibility barriers, raising questions about their sustainability, usability, and
quality, particularly within the constraints posed by car dependency and a hot-arid climate. Despite
case studies examining public spaces in Saudi Arabia—primarily focusing on design attributes or
per capita availability— assessing the distribution and design quality of walkways remains a
potential gap. This thesis addresses this gap by examining walkways as part of the public open
space and evaluating their spatial equity and quality, using Al Khobar as a case study.
Al Khobar, a mid-sized city in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province with over 650,000 residents,
continues to expand its network of walkways across neighborhoods despite rapid urban growth,
the lack of sidewalks on local streets, and car dependency. However, there is limited research on
whether these walkways effectively attract and serve residents from diverse socioeconomic groups
and backgrounds, and whether they create attractive and comfortable public spaces despite climatic
extremes. This study adopts a mixed-methods approach, including GIS-based spatial analysis, site
observations, semi-structured interviews, and document analysis, to assess their relative success.
The thesis is divided into two main parts: (I) assess the spatial equity of walkways across Al
Khobar’s districts, and (II) evaluate the design quality of walkways, guided by William H. Whyte’s
principles of social urban spaces. Finally, the research develops recommendations and future
strategies intended to advance the discourse on walkways in Saudi Arabia and enhance their spatial
equity and quality as essential public open spaces.
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Keywords
Spatial Equity, Walkways, Public Open Space, Al Khobar
