Urban guided transit: positioning rail and its rubber-tyred competitors

dc.contributor.authorVan der Meulen, R.D. (Dave)
dc.contributor.authorMoller, L.C. (Fienie)
dc.contributor.otherSouthern African Transport Conference (31st : 2012 : Pretoria, South Africa)
dc.contributor.otherMinister of Transport, South Africa
dc.date.accessioned2012-10-05T11:19:58Z
dc.date.available2012-10-05T11:19:58Z
dc.date.created2012-07-09
dc.date.issuedJuly 2012
dc.descriptionThis paper was transferred from the original CD ROM created for this conference. The material was published using Adobe Acrobat 10.1.0 Technology. The original CD ROM was produced by Document Transformation Technologies Postal Address: PO Box 560 Irene 0062 South Africa. Tel.: +27 12 667 2074 Fax: +27 12 667 2766 E-mail: nigel@doctech URL: http://www.doctech.co.zaen_US
dc.description.abstractPaper presented at the 31st Annual Southern African Transport Conference 9-12 July 2012 "Getting Southern Africa to Work", CSIR International Convention Centre, Pretoria, South Africa.en_US
dc.description.abstractRailways are inherently competitive when they exploit their strengths of heavy axle load, high speed, and many coupled vehicles. However, urban guided transit, whether steel- or rubber tyred, naturally achieves neither heavy axle load nor high speed: Many coupled vehicles are its only comparative advantage. Four lighter guided transit modes have therefore made inroads into rail’s traditional domain. The authors hypothesized that country and city attributes influenced which guided transit mode or modes fitted particular cities. They populated a database with ninety-eight variables from three hundred and thirty cities, and applied the statistical interventions multivariate factor analysis and structural equation modeling to it. Findings included seven country latent variables whose regression coefficients pointed to the positioning of Heavy Metro, Automated Guided Transit, Monorail, Light Metro, Bus Rapid Transit, and Light Rail: Heavy Metro and Light Rail now represent the poles of an urban guided transit continuum, in which rubber-tyred automated modes have penetrated rail’s traditional market space. In conclusion, green cities require more nuanced guided transit solutions that also address lower capacity requirements. In South Africa, alternative contemporary guided transit solutions to the challenges of long commutes to and from low density communities should be considered.en_US
dc.description.librariandm2012en
dc.format.extent11 pagesen_US
dc.format.mediumPDFen_US
dc.identifier.isbn978-1-920017-53-8
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/20029
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherDocument Transformation Technologies
dc.relation.ispartofSATC 2012
dc.rightsUniversity of Pretoriaen_US
dc.subjectRailwaysen_US
dc.subjectAutomated Guided Transiten_US
dc.subjectMonorailen_US
dc.subjectBus Rapid Transiten_US
dc.subject.lcshTransportation
dc.subject.lcshTransportation -- Africa
dc.subject.lcshTransportation -- Southern Africa
dc.titleUrban guided transit: positioning rail and its rubber-tyred competitorsen_US
dc.typePresentationen_US

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