Abstract

There has been long and ongoing interest in the impacts of high-speed rail (HSR) on regional spatial development. Most existing studies, however, reported findings at relatively coarse geographic scales, i.e., at the prefecture-city or above level in the Chinese context. This paper presents the empirical evidence of HSR impacts from the county-level cities in China’s Mid-Yangtze River City-Cluster Region (MYRCCR). The study utilized rail time data and the socio-economic data for MYRCCR’s 185 county-level cities in the years of 2006 (without HSR) and 2014 (with HSR) and analyzed the impacts of HSR on inter-city travel times, accessibility, spatial inequality, and regional economic linkages among the MYRCCR cities. The results show that, from 2006 to 2014, HSR reduced city-to-city average travel time by 34.5% or 124 min and improved accessibility to all cities in the MYRCCR. HSR’s impacts on accessibility and spatial equality exhibited a scale-differentiated pattern. MYRCCR-wide, HSR transformed a pattern of spatial polarization towards the one of corridorization. Cities located on major HSR corridors became more balanced in 2014 than in 2006. Nevertheless, at the county-city level, the gap between cities with the most and the least accessibility gains was much greater than the gap between those with the largest and the smallest travel time savings. Attributable to HSR services, the intensity of economic linkage increased between MYRCCR cities, especially between the provincial capital cities and those on the major lines of the national HSR grid, which implies an emerging process towards territorial cohesion in MYRCCR. National, provincial, and local governments should consider transportation as well as non-transportation policies and measures to direct HSR impacts towards further enhanced spatial development and regional equality.

Highlights

  • High-speed rail (HSR) has experienced a phenomenal growth in China in the past two decades

  • This paper aims to enhance the knowledge base by presenting the empirical evidence of HSR impacts learned from a study at the county-city level in China’s Mid-Yangtze River City-Cluster Region (MYRCCR)

  • MRYCCR is the first city-cluster region served by the long-haul HSR line in China

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Summary

Introduction

High-speed rail (HSR) has experienced a phenomenal growth in China in the past two decades. Investing in HSR is an essential part of China’s national spatial development strategy [1,2,3]. The recent update of national spatial strategy highlights city-cluster regions as the main form to promote coordinated development between cities of different sizes and to reduce rural-urban as well as inter-regional disparities. HSR together with other transportation systems are anticipated to enhance the accessibility of people, jobs, and capital within and between city-cluster regions and to strengthen local and regional competitiveness in the global economy [4,5]. How and to what extent does HSR affect the spatial development of city regions? There has been increasing research on China’s HSR effects in terms of compressions of inter-city travel time, cost, distance, competition with civil aviation, regional economic

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