The effects of tourism on HSR: Spanish empirical evidence derived from a multi-criteria corridor selection methodology

B Guirao, JL Campa - Journal of Transport Geography, 2015 - Elsevier
B Guirao, JL Campa
Journal of Transport Geography, 2015Elsevier
The exorbitant cost of new High-Speed Rail (HSR) lines requires a selection methodology to
define which HSR corridors within a network should be built first, and the most suitable
evaluation tool appears to be the multi-criteria approach. In any corridor-ranking
methodology, and especially in countries with high tourism attractiveness, tourism impacts
on HSR should be considered as a variable. In addition to economic geography and
destination choice models, the current literature on tourism demand is dominated by …
Abstract
The exorbitant cost of new High-Speed Rail (HSR) lines requires a selection methodology to define which HSR corridors within a network should be built first, and the most suitable evaluation tool appears to be the multi-criteria approach. In any corridor-ranking methodology, and especially in countries with high tourism attractiveness, tourism impacts on HSR should be considered as a variable.
In addition to economic geography and destination choice models, the current literature on tourism demand is dominated by econometric models using a single-equation time-series based approach. However little research has been done so far on methodologies to rank HSR corridors taking into account the tourism variable. In 2014, a ranking methodology developed by Todorovich and Hagler was validated using the current Spanish HSR network. Twelve variables were used to create an index to assign scores to the city pairs, but tourism was not included as a variable. The findings showed the consistency of the model for ranking pairs mainly in the top O–D relations; however the tool failed to discriminate clearly between secondary groups of corridors.
The aim of this paper is to assess empirically the positive effect of tourism on HSR and to enhance the abovementioned ranking tool with a tourism database. The new methodology is tested by application to 1176 city pairs in Spain, and the results clearly show that the implementation of a tourism variable helps discriminate between secondary groups of corridors and offers a more effective approach for determining the implications of tourism on HSR.
Elsevier
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