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地方圏における鉄道・バスのオフピーク・パターンダイヤの重要性

Hansson, Joel LU (2025) In Transportation and Economics 85(3). p.68-76
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to look into patronage effects of extended supply outside peak hours on regional public transport services. Previous studies have shown that the service frequency is an attribute of great importance for regional passengers, but little is known about the details regarding peak and off-peak frequencies or service hours. The present study addresses this knowledge gap, departing from the hypothesis that additional off-peak supply means more flexibility for the passengers in terms of departure time options, and possibly also a sense of security for passengers who are uncertain about the time of their (return) trips. Essentially, the added off-peak departures may attract more passengers even if they normally do not... (More)
The purpose of this study is to look into patronage effects of extended supply outside peak hours on regional public transport services. Previous studies have shown that the service frequency is an attribute of great importance for regional passengers, but little is known about the details regarding peak and off-peak frequencies or service hours. The present study addresses this knowledge gap, departing from the hypothesis that additional off-peak supply means more flexibility for the passengers in terms of departure time options, and possibly also a sense of security for passengers who are uncertain about the time of their (return) trips. Essentially, the added off-peak departures may attract more passengers even if they normally do not or only occasionally use the off-peak services. The patronage effects are explored through four case studies from the region of Scania in southern Sweden. The cases include regional rail and bus services where substantial improvements have been made outside peak hours, resulting in at least hourly all-day services. The results of the study provide new insights into the fundamental planning policy trade-off between maximum frequency and span of public transport services in urban peripheries and rural areas. Importantly, the results suggest that improved time coverage may lead to substantial patronage growth, and this growth is evident also during peak hours, despite unaltered peak hour frequencies. Hence, off-peak departures cannot be assessed only through patronage levels in isolated time periods, let alone on the individual departures. (Less)
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author
organization
alternative title
Importance of regular off-peak departures on rural rail and bus services
Betydelsen av regelbundna avgångar utanför rusningstid på regionala tåg- och busslinjer
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
public transport, Rural accessibility, Regional rail, Regional bus, timetable planning, service hours, daily variation
in
Transportation and Economics
volume
85
issue
3
pages
68 - 76
language
Japanese
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Based on previous article https://doi.org/10.1186/s12544-022-00543-4
id
13f16ccb-76ff-49fc-9acd-416d656feb40
date added to LUP
2025-03-26 14:36:32
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:52:06
@article{13f16ccb-76ff-49fc-9acd-416d656feb40,
  abstract     = {{The purpose of this study is to look into patronage effects of extended supply outside peak hours on regional public transport services. Previous studies have shown that the service frequency is an attribute of great importance for regional passengers, but little is known about the details regarding peak and off-peak frequencies or service hours. The present study addresses this knowledge gap, departing from the hypothesis that additional off-peak supply means more flexibility for the passengers in terms of departure time options, and possibly also a sense of security for passengers who are uncertain about the time of their (return) trips. Essentially, the added off-peak departures may attract more passengers even if they normally do not or only occasionally use the off-peak services. The patronage effects are explored through four case studies from the region of Scania in southern Sweden. The cases include regional rail and bus services where substantial improvements have been made outside peak hours, resulting in at least hourly all-day services. The results of the study provide new insights into the fundamental planning policy trade-off between maximum frequency and span of public transport services in urban peripheries and rural areas. Importantly, the results suggest that improved time coverage may lead to substantial patronage growth, and this growth is evident also during peak hours, despite unaltered peak hour frequencies. Hence, off-peak departures cannot be assessed only through patronage levels in isolated time periods, let alone on the individual departures.}},
  author       = {{Hansson, Joel}},
  keywords     = {{public transport; Rural accessibility; Regional rail; Regional bus; timetable planning; service hours; daily variation}},
  language     = {{jpn}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{68--76}},
  series       = {{Transportation and Economics}},
  title        = {{地方圏における鉄道・バスのオフピーク・パターンダイヤの重要性}},
  volume       = {{85}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}