Landside Accessibility - Report from Zurich Airport



Similar documents
The German High Speed Rail System. DB International GmbH Ottmar Grein Bilbao,

presented by Michael Schürch, Train Path Management

Be a Partner of Qatar Rail Dynamische Informationssysteme

Eliminating Gridlock Through Effective Travel Demand Management and Urban Mobility Strategies

Connected mobility services to reduce individual traffic

siemens.com/mobility Travel smarter with electronic ticketing


Eurotunnel 2020 potential traffic estimate (Extract)

Dr. Donald A. Keller, Direktor Regionalplanung Zürich und Umgebung RZU

SiL and Swisscom join forces on fibre-optic network in Lausanne. Press conference, Lausanne, 4 July 2012

Transport Demand Management

Case Study. Mercadona and Renfe: Intermodal Collaboration Distribution. European Commission

Seamless Multimodal Integration for Smart City Public Transportation Network

The train-path pricing system. Who pays how much to rail infrastructure?

WHERE BUSINESS BEGINS AND TRENDS ARE CREATED

Indian Days, Hannover Dirk Esters, HaCon Ingenieurgesellschaft

Integrated mobility with eticketing

Welcome to Bremen. Michael Glotz-Richter, Senior Project Manager Sustainable Mobility, Free Hanseatic City of Bremen

Certificate of Banking & Insurance

Individual Mobility Services: Closing the Gap between Public and Private Transport

Traffic management by information: Ten years of Berlin Traffic Information Centre (TIC) from the operator s point of view

Marketing Sustainable Mobility in Munich - The Mobility Management Concept -

Arrival and Departure. Information for disabled passengers and passengers with reduced mobility at Frankfurt Airport

Integrating mobility services through a B2B platform. e-monday, 20. Juli Steffen Schaefer, Siemens AG.

FRAConnect Incentive program

How To Make An Electric Bus In Europe

Parking Management. Index. Purpose. Description. Relevance for Large Scale Events. Options. Technologies. Impacts. Integration potential

FOLLOW-UP ZURICH PROCESS:

Using MATSim for Public Transport Analysis

Concept for Railway and Transportation in Southern Norway. High Speed Line Oslo Hadeland Gjøvik Moelv. with High Speed Line Oslo Trondheim / Ålesund

them. You will be guided by your Student Mentor or you can follow the Student Guide issued by IZ (Interantionales Zentrum). Please make sure you have

SOUTH EAST EUROPE TRANSNATIONAL CO-OPERATION PROGRAMME. Terms of reference

European Low Fares Airline Association

Nate Smith Executive Vice President DFW International Airport DALLAS/FORT WORTH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

Development of a Concept for the Public Transport Interconnectivity for Savaria International Airport. Report

2nd End-User Group Meeting on 3D Face Recognition

Operating Concept and System Design of a Transrapid Maglev Line and a High-Speed Railway in the pan-european Corridor IV

Policies and progress on transport access, including access for the rural population and low-income households

Marketing Sustainable Mobility!

Barbara Auer Mobility section, Department of Public Works and Transport, Canton of Basel-City

Cefic Position on Intermodal Transport Network Development

Chapter 3 Alternatives to air travel: highspeed rail and videoconferencing

High speed railway principles

SCOUTS & GUIDES 2014 Version 1

Case Study. Cargo Domizil - Intermodal less than truckload transport. European Commission

How To Understand And Understand Rwth Aachen University

AER Summer School 2010 W E L C O M E

University of Zurich, Faculty of Economics lic.oec.publ Johns Hopkins University, Department of Political Economy

Mobility Service Providers Will Offer Door-to-Door Travel Solutions on a One-Stop-Shop Basis

Vernetzte Mobilität: Die IT-Perspektive.

START OFF AT The MOST STRATEGIC LOCATION

Urban Cable Propelled Transit Systems High Flying Solution to Urban Transport Problems?

THE OBJECTIVES AND FRAMEWORK FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF FORUS

DB Training, Learning & Consulting. Learning & Training Solutions for Deutsche Bahn and the Railway & Transport Markets Worldwide

COST TUD0804 Final Conference Merano 2013

How do we plan for the future Øresund region?

Melbourne Airport Rail Link Study. Study overview and findings

Network Rail Consultation on Draft West Coast Main Line Route Utilisation Strategy Consultation Response by Birmingham International Airport Limited

The deployment of public transport innovation in European cities and regions. Ivo Cré, Polis

Qatar Railway Company

Press release from Siemens, Barco, Inform, ATRiCS, DLR and Stuttgart Airport

Bank- und finanzwirtschaftliche Forschungen Band 395

M. Klumpp. Berufswertigkeit, IQF & ESCO: How to Structure European Logistics Education & Human Resource Management?

The Effects of High-Speed Rail on the Reduction of Air Traffic Congestion

Demo CrediNet AG c/o Mode CrediNet Peter und Paul Strasse 19

GSM-R Projects. Realized with GSM900

European Strategy 2050 TEN-T Methodology: Italian TEN-T network proposal

30 years German-French Cooperation in Transport Research (DEUFRAKO)

New Scholarships New Scholarships 2005

Program. Partnerschulinitiative / Partner School Initiative. Information Tour for Officers from f

Integrating bicycles in public transport the evaluation of six German projects

Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. Kamppi

Aderonke Osikominu. Applied Econometrics, Economics of Education, Labor Economics, Program Evaluation

Exchange Summary Report University of St. Gallen, Switzerland

THE FUTURE OF RAIL MANIFESTO. The five pillars of customer experience modern rail depends on.

The Human Right to Science: New Directions for Human Rights in Science

Integration of Sustainable Approaches in the Building Design Process

DAAD Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst German Academic Exchange Service

Gondrand Switzerland. Global, personal, pioneering. Personally worldwide.

Success with three networks: SBB Infrastructure. InnoTrans 2012.

Transcription:

3rd Airport Planning Seminar Landside Accessibility - Report from Zurich Airport Tina Wagner, European Centre of Transport and Logistics, TU Hamburg-Harburg The presentation is based on a study about the potential accessibility of airports by rail transport using Zurich as a case study carried out for Institut für Städtebau und Landesplanung, Universität Karlsruhe, Prof. Bernd Scholl

Overview Landside access some general aspects Analysis: Landside accessibility of Zurich Airport current state Looking at the others Development: General tendencies Developments of rail network and local public transport (PT) Crucial points for Zurich Airport Possibilities for the future accessibility of Zurich Airport Conclusion

Accessibility Components of the access time to air traffic by rail: Access time to the next public transport stop / station Travel time (including transfer times) Time spent at the airport (minimum) 20-30 min changing 20-40 min Focus on travel time in this study One hour travel time is set as threshold for good accessibility Why is the improvement of accessibility by rail interesting? Substitution of feeding flights Availability of slots Extension of the service area Competitiveness Shift of modal share Less traffic on the surrounding road network Rail transport is more reliable in respect to access time

Integration Zurich - Integration into the ZVV Existing integration into the local Public Transport Net (ZVV) S 2, every 60 min S 16, every 30 min Source: ZVV

Integration into the rail network Existing integration into the rail network Travel time Airport Main Station about 10 min Waldshut T = 1:10 Schaffhausen T = 0:52 Konstanz T = 1:03 Romanshorn T = 0:57 Basel SBB T = 1:09 BS Bad Bhf. T = 1:36 Großraum Zürich Im ZVV unter 1:00 St. Gallen T = 0:54 Luzern T = 1:03 Source: SBB

Accessibility by road transport Travel time 1 hour Approximately 3 to 3.5 mio inhabitants But often congestion around the airport Source: Sachplan Strasse

Comparing airports Zurich Integrated into rail network and local PT (ZVV) about 1.6 1.8 mio Frankfurt Integrated into rail network and local PT (RMV) about 6 8 mio Stuttgart Integrated into local PT (VVS) about 1 1.5 mio Munich Integrated into local PT (MVV) about 1.2-2 mio Frankfurt Travel time < 1 hour Zurich Stuttgart

Extended service area Accessibility of alternative airports in the greater service area of Zurich Airport Cities with equal airport choices Freiburg Tuttlingen / Rottweil Bern / Biel Regions that might be interesting concerning improved access Southern Upper Rhine Bern/Biel Lake Constance

Analysis - Conclusion Rail Zurich airport is integrated into the local public transport network and the rail network through the airport station Zurich Main Station as major Swiss rail interchange is accessible in 10 minutes travel time Access by rail from the north is insufficient The extension of the one hour service area is comparatively small Road The road network around the airport is at its limits Modal Split for landside access is 50% public transport (a modal split of 50% PT is a precondition of the airport operation concession)

Planned developments Stuttgart, Munich and EAP will be better integrated into the distance rail connections. Travel time < 1 hour All airports benefit from track improvements or new track developments, the German airports particularly benefit from High Speed transport. General extension of the service areas that leads to overlapping in some areas.

Swiss infrastructure planning documents Sachplan Infrastruktur der Luftfahrt (SIL) General statement: Air traffic is to be integrated into the transport system The integration of the main airports into the European High Speed Network, Swiss and regional rail network is to be optimised Special meaning: Integration into the European high speed rail transport aiming at flight substitution (Zurich is seen as well integrated) Rail connection EAP A high share of public transport for landside access Sachplan Schiene/ÖV General statement: Holistic approach to all transport modes / integration Priorities: Access to European High Speed Traffic, NEAT, Bahn 2000 2nd stage Sachplan Strasse General statement: Holistic approach to all transport modes / integration Aim: Ensure connection of the important transport infrastructures to the road network

Development - Local PT Glatttalbahn Local public transport line that will be implemented 2006-2010, airport access 2008 Extension of Zurich's local PT system (ZVV) Zurich Main Station: New through station 2012 Source: Verkehrsbetriebe Glatttal

Development Rail transport Planned developments in rail transport And Crucial points for the accessibility to Zurich Airport Access from the North Zurich Main Station and the integrated Swiss schedule (Knotenprinzip) Improved connection with Bale

Potential accessibility by rail Cities from which the airport could be accessible within 1 hour travel time Increasing number of passengers 2005 about 200,000 2015 about 200,000 2020 about 400,000 total of about 3 mio in 2020

Vision 2030 Cooperation between Zurich Airport and Euro Airport Separate operation but cooperation Operation as single airport High speed connection between the airports 3rd terminal at Basel main station? Potential passengers: 4.2 mio

Conclusion Currently 1.6-1.8 mio. people can access Zurich Airport in less than 1 hour travel time from the closest station. Actually planned is an improved integration into local PT (Glatttalbahn), that does not necessarily extend the service area. The population living in a one hour service area could be increased to 3 mio if the following three issues are solved: Improvement of the northern access Zurich Main Station: Reducing the time losses due to the Knotenprinzip Faster connection to Bale And it could even be increased up to about 4 mio if Zurich Airport and EAP are operated together connected by a high speed line.

Conclusion Such a development not only improves airport accessibility by rail but also offers promising possibilities for the greater Zurich region. Improvement of the border-crossing regional traffic with South Germany Development of a second traffic interchange in the north of Zurich Conclusion: Improving airport accessibility by rail is possible and can be integrated into a broader perspective of rail transport development between the Swiss regions and across the Swiss border. Intermodality is more than integrated/connected transport systems, it also includes the coordinated operation of a journey. Additional measures like combined travel information and combined tickets, early Check-In at train stations or coordination of trains and flights have to be considered, too.