— bretagne · 22
Éréac: what is reachable on foot, by bike, by car — June 2026
Services on foot (15 min) from Éréac
2
- vs department median +2
2 of 6 essential services: doctor, school.
OSM network isochrone · BPE/INSEE amenities
Access to services from Éréac
From the centre of Éréac, 2 of the 6 essential services are reachable on foot within 15 minutes.
On foot (15 min)
2/6 services
OSM network isochrone · BPE/INSEE amenities
By bike (15 min)
3/6 services
OSM network isochrone · BPE/INSEE amenities
By car (15 min)
6/6 services
OSM network isochrone · BPE/INSEE amenities
The detail: what is reachable, and how
For each essential service, the fastest way to reach it from the centre of Éréac (on foot, by bike, or by car within 15 minutes).
| Service | On foot | By bike | By car |
|---|---|---|---|
| bakery | — | — | yes |
| grocery | — | — | yes |
| pharmacy | — | yes | yes |
| doctor | yes | yes | yes |
| school | yes | yes | yes |
| nursery | — | — | yes |
[[accessibilite.breakdown.intro_method]]
— Read more
Living in Éréac: on foot or by car?
In Éréac, some essential services are reachable on foot, the rest by bike or car. A common suburban profile: walking covers what is close, the car stays useful.
These figures are computed on the real street network (isochrone), not as the crow flies: they reflect journeys actually travelled.
— Your questions
Frequently asked questions
How is accessibility calculated?
By network isochrone: from the centre of the town we compute every street reachable in 5, 10 and 15 minutes on foot, by bike and by car, then count the amenities (BPE/INSEE) within. It is the real journey, not straight-line distance.
Which services are counted?
The six essential daily services: bakery, grocery, pharmacy, doctor, school and nursery.
Is accessibility in Éréac good for a car-free family?
It depends on the number of services reachable on foot shown above: the higher it is, the more daily life works without a car. In rural areas this number is often low and a car remains necessary.
Is this data up to date?
Amenities come from INSEE’s Permanent Equipment Database (BPE) and the road network from OpenStreetMap. Calculations are refreshed periodically.
Sources: Amenities: Permanent Equipment Database (BPE), INSEE. Road network: OpenStreetMap (© OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL). Isochrones computed by NextToYourPlace.