Abstract

The ground access mode used by air passengers to an airport has a vital impact on infrastructural and environmental decisions. An important aspect of a passenger’s mode choice is the sensitivity to factors such as access time and access cost. The objective of this research was to analyse air passenger’s sensitivity to access mode choice attributes, that is,access time, access cost, parking time and parking cost at two airports in Johannesburg, South Africa. A stated choice experiment was used to obtain the information and a latent class model was estimated. In general, discrete choice experiments are designed to reveal respondent(preference) heterogeneity and the latent class model allows for this heterogeneity to be modelled discretely. The estimated results indicated that three latent classes provided the best fit with preference heterogeneity evident from the set of parameter estimates. The access mode used was found to be the only significant covariate in the class assignment model. The respondents’ willingness to pay for a reduction in access time was estimated and it indicated that respondents had the highest access time willingness-to-pay value for the taxi as access mode. In addition, it was estimated that passengers being dropped off at the airport had a higher access time willingness-to-pay than passengers that used their own vehicles to the airport. The research results confirmed the presence of respondent heterogeneity (according to access mode) which resulted in different access time willingness-to-pay values.

Highlights

  • The ground access mode choice of passengers to an airport has a significant impact on policy decisions relating to infrastructure requirements and the environment

  • The results indicated that travel cost and travel time reliability were the most important factors considered by passengers when selecting an access mode

  • The sample composition indicates that road transport accounted for the largest proportion of access modes used. This is mainly because the train was only an option for passengers travelling to Oliver R. Tambo International Airport (ORTIA) and required the passenger to either drive to the train station themselves and park the vehicle, use the drop-off option or use the bus service to the train station

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Summary

Introduction

The ground access mode choice of passengers to an airport has a significant impact on policy decisions relating to infrastructure requirements (inclusive of airport landside planning) and the environment. Decision-makers find the sensitivity of passengers’ airport access mode choice to external factors such as access time and access cost of great interest. Johannesburg (Gauteng Province, South Africa) has one major international airport, Oliver R. Tambo International Airport (ORTIA) and a number of smaller regional airports, of which Lanseria International Airport (LIA) is the major competing airport in terms of domestic flights. ORTIA, which is managed by the Airports Company South Africa, provides long-haul and shorthaul services and is served by a combination of full-service scheduled carriers and low-cost carriers. LIA is privately owned and is served by charter airlines and low-cost carriers. LIA is situated approximately 35 km west of Johannesburg and ORTIA approximately 20 km east of Johannesburg

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