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Accessibility impact of proposed Australian high speed rail

Version 2 2024-06-17, 16:33
Version 1 2015-11-26, 15:30
conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 16:33 authored by K Nepal, Z Ghofrani
High speed rail (also commonly known as HSR) is highly regarded as one of the most significant innovation for mass passenger transportation to travellers willing to pay for reduced travel impediments (shorter travel time, convenience, safety, security, comfort, reliability, flexibility, uniqueness and attractiveness). The transport policy in Australia has until now focused primarily on private passenger car transport and air transportation to the degree that State and Federal Governments’ commitments and actions of rail-oriented mass transportation system still remains sketchy in spite of occasional political and public attentions into it. This has resulted in a limited use of passenger rail as a regional transport system. Using one of the several alternative HSR alignments proposed for the South-Eastern Coast of Australia connecting Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney and Brisbane, this study assesses the regional accessibility impacts of Australian HSR system by means of four indicators: location accessibility, economic potential accessibility, daily accessibility and commuting accessibility. These indicators are commonly used in transport geography literature and they offer different concepts of changes in regional accessibility conditions due to a long distance transport system. The results provide an understanding of differential effects on regional accessibility based on the geographical location and size of urban areas along HSR corridor.

History

Pagination

1-15

Location

Washington D.C.

Start date

2015-01-11

End date

2015-01-14

Language

eng

Publication classification

E Conference publication, EN.1 Other conference paper

Copyright notice

2015, Transportation Research Board

Title of proceedings

TRB 2015 : Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2015

Event

Transportation Research Board. Annual Meeting (94th : 2015 : Washington D.C.)

Publisher

Transportation Research Board

Place of publication

[Washington D.C.]

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