4.7 Article

The attitude of potentially less mobile people towards demand responsive transport in a rural area in central Germany

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY
Volume 96, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2021.103202

Keywords

Demand responsive transport; Rural areas; Sustainable mobility; Ageing society; Individual factors

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The study confirms that car availability harms the intended use of DRT, while physical impairment has a positive effect. The influence of age on the intended EcoBus use depends on the residence place's city size and offer of daily public services. Residents in sub-centers show decreasing willingness to use EcoBus with age, while the opposite tends to happen in small villages.
Demand Responsive Transport (DRT) systems are often discussed to expand public transport in rural areas, where conventional buses are often used below capacity. DRT systems can particularly improve the mobility situation for less mobile people or other people who depend on public transport and ultimately prevent them from social exclusion. This paper examines whether people who show characteristics that indicate a mobility deficit are more willing to access the DRT system EcoBus in a rural area of Germany. Using survey data from 156 respondents from households in the EcoBus service area and utilizing linear regression analysis, this study confirms that car availability harms the intended use of DRT and that physical impairment has a positive effect, as identified several times in the literature. Furthermore, the influence of age on the intended EcoBus use depends on the residence place's city size and hence on its offer of daily public services. While residents of a sub-centre of the region are significantly less willing to use the EcoBus with increasing age, there is an opposite tendency for small villages. Thus, in small inaccessible localities, the likelihood of using EcoBus increases with age, suggesting that DRT systems benefit the doubly constrained population, namely the elderly population in localities with few public services.

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