Abstract

Providing a sustainable public transport service for areas with several small villages or hamlets is a challenge for the whole of Europe. To serve ‘dead-end villages’, vehicles must make a to-and-fro detour to each village, which requires considerable performance from the operator, and the service must also be ordered from the responsible bodies. The number of inhabitants in rural areas is constantly decreasing, and the remaining residents are aging. This process is due to the fact that economically active people in the country tend to move into towns offering jobs and public institutions instead of commuting to work. The performance requirement of serving low transport demand areas like ‘dead-end villages’ is high, while the number of passengers is very low. Furthermore, passengers are economically less active, and thus their transport must largely be subsidized. The present study hypothesizes that replacing traditional public transport with demand responsive transport (DRT) can make the service of rural areas with less public transport service and low demand sustainable. To prove this hypothesis, a generally applicable, innovative method of analysis based on performance–allocation is introduced, and the application of this method is illustrated by a case study conducted in northeastern Hungary. The number of ‘dead-end villages’ is high in the surveyed area; consequently, the results are impressive. The mathematical model applied here uses several parameters (e.g., population, traffic surveys, trip distance, operational costs), thus the analysis is highly complex.

Highlights

  • Owing to the low number of inhabitants and the low population density in rural areas, providing public transport for several small villages or hamlets is a challenge in the whole of Europe

  • In the examples cited in SMARTA [1] and Pettersson [3], hamlets are served by demand responsive traffic (DRT)

  • These services were established with a common purpose, while operation parameters cover a broad spectrum

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Summary

Introduction

Owing to the low number of inhabitants and the low population density in rural areas, providing public transport for several small villages or hamlets is a challenge in the whole of Europe. Traditional public transport is hardly sustainable financially, while ensuring only a low-level service. In the examples cited in SMARTA [1] and Pettersson [3], hamlets are served by demand responsive traffic (DRT). These services were established with a common purpose (i.e., serving areas with low population density; establishing social cohesion; lowering operational costs), while operation parameters cover a broad spectrum (financing, pricing, availability, relationship with the traditional public transport, fleet size). While DRT services were available for only a closed circle of people at the beginning of the 1990s (e.g., for the disabled), today open-access systems are spreading

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