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Gateways to prosperity? The long term impacts of new local railway stations

Gateways to prosperity? The long term impacts of new local railway stations
Gateways to prosperity? The long term impacts of new local railway stations
Despite the large number of local stations opened in the UK in recent years, little analysis has been undertaken of their long-term effects on the communities they aim to serve. This paper aims to address this gap by investigating the short and long-run impact of recently-opened stations on the communities they were designed to serve, using two UK case studies.

Firstly, the long-term impacts of local station construction are assessed using census data from 1981, 1991 and 2001. The catchments of 13 stations opened in West Yorkshire are compared to 20 sites in the same area where stations were proposed but never opened, to establish whether station construction has had a significant impact on population, land use, employment and social class. Detailed analysis of census journey to work data allows changes in commuting flows since station opening to be quantified and compared to background changes in commute patterns from the areas where no stations were constructed. This analysis of census data is supplemented by investigations of land use changes using GIS to analyse spatial data.

Secondly, the short-run impacts of new station opening are investigated based on a further set of case study sites. This is made up of 13 stations opened between 2002 and 2005 across the UK, and of 20 comparable sites where new stations have been considered but where no construction has yet taken place. A range of annual statistics on resident population, housing stock, housing prices, employment, income, and business location and size are used to establish whether or not station opening affects the demographic and economic characteristics of an area in the period immediately following station opening.

Together, the results from the two sets of case studies allow the appraisal of schemes for new local railway stations to be improved, by clarifying the impact of new stations on their catchment areas, and allowing more accurate estimation of the social costs and benefits of their construction.

Blainey, S.P.
ee6198e5-1f89-4f9b-be8e-52cc10e8b3bb
Preston, J.M.
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b
Blainey, S.P.
ee6198e5-1f89-4f9b-be8e-52cc10e8b3bb
Preston, J.M.
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b

Blainey, S.P. and Preston, J.M. (2010) Gateways to prosperity? The long term impacts of new local railway stations. European Transport Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom. 11 - 13 Oct 2010.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Despite the large number of local stations opened in the UK in recent years, little analysis has been undertaken of their long-term effects on the communities they aim to serve. This paper aims to address this gap by investigating the short and long-run impact of recently-opened stations on the communities they were designed to serve, using two UK case studies.

Firstly, the long-term impacts of local station construction are assessed using census data from 1981, 1991 and 2001. The catchments of 13 stations opened in West Yorkshire are compared to 20 sites in the same area where stations were proposed but never opened, to establish whether station construction has had a significant impact on population, land use, employment and social class. Detailed analysis of census journey to work data allows changes in commuting flows since station opening to be quantified and compared to background changes in commute patterns from the areas where no stations were constructed. This analysis of census data is supplemented by investigations of land use changes using GIS to analyse spatial data.

Secondly, the short-run impacts of new station opening are investigated based on a further set of case study sites. This is made up of 13 stations opened between 2002 and 2005 across the UK, and of 20 comparable sites where new stations have been considered but where no construction has yet taken place. A range of annual statistics on resident population, housing stock, housing prices, employment, income, and business location and size are used to establish whether or not station opening affects the demographic and economic characteristics of an area in the period immediately following station opening.

Together, the results from the two sets of case studies allow the appraisal of schemes for new local railway stations to be improved, by clarifying the impact of new stations on their catchment areas, and allowing more accurate estimation of the social costs and benefits of their construction.

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More information

Published date: October 2010
Venue - Dates: European Transport Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 2010-10-11 - 2010-10-13
Organisations: Transportation Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 195179
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/195179
PURE UUID: e85c8217-7e11-4460-8c53-e1e6bd30ec43
ORCID for S.P. Blainey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4249-8110
ORCID for J.M. Preston: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6866-049X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Aug 2011 11:05
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:59

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