A version of this collaboratively authored article was first presented as a performance-paper at a plenary session of ‘Everyday Walking Culture’, Sixth International Conference on ‘Walking in the 21st Century’ (organised by Walk21 at Lakeside Conference Centre, Zurich, 22.09.2005). The manifesto was commissioned from Wrights & Sites as a keynote intervention in the conference, with its focus on the future of cities, public access, the creative agencies of walkers and their implications for civic planners/policy makers. What are the political, cultural and structural means whereby walking may be re-valued in urban contexts? (See http://www.walk21.com/conferences/zurich/asp). In this context, a number of questions and issues were investigated...