Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington

In response to the environmental, economic and social costs associated with over-reliance on the private car, planners and policy-makers are promoting Park-and-Ride, or the combined use of car and public transport. Despite Park-and-Ride’s growing popularity, little has been written on the subject in...

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Main Author: Ryan, Nicola (11799587)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1
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spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17132261 2023-05-15T13:47:02+02:00 Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington Ryan, Nicola (11799587) 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Towards_a_More_Comprehensive_Picture_of_Park-And-Ride_A_Mixed_Methods_Study_of_Stakeholder_Perspectives_and_Transport_Behaviour_in_Greater_Wellington/17132261 doi:10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1 Author Retains Copyright Human Geography not elsewhere classified Park-and-Ride Public transport Parking Multi-modal Walking Cycling Policy acceptability Wellington New Zealand School: School of Geography Environment and Earth Sciences Unit: Antarctic Research Centre 160499 Human Geography not elsewhere classified 960302 Climate Change Mitigation Strategies 889899 Environmentally Sustainable Transport not elsewhere classified Degree Discipline: Environmental Studies Degree Level: Masters Degree Name: Master of Environmental Studies Text Thesis 2018 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1 2021-12-19T20:04:28Z In response to the environmental, economic and social costs associated with over-reliance on the private car, planners and policy-makers are promoting Park-and-Ride, or the combined use of car and public transport. Despite Park-and-Ride’s growing popularity, little has been written on the subject in the New Zealand context. This thesis addresses this gap. Its objective is to understand the behaviour of commuters in order to inform the development of policies to increase walking and cycling to and from the station. It uses a mixed methods approach, based on stakeholder interviews and an online survey conducted in Greater Wellington. Interviews with eight stakeholders involved in public transport planning and policy sought to provide insight into the challenges of implementing Park-and-Ride and how the concept can be developed in the future. More effective management of parking was seen as a key challenge for those tasked with making policy decisions. Stakeholders also discussed the potential for developing the concept, particularly by transitioning Park-and-Ride into interchanges for motorised and non-motorised transport modes, with priority given to walking and cycling access. A survey conducted among 295 respondents who commuted to Wellington City sought to explore the psychological and contextual factors in predicting the intention to walk and cycle to the train station. The usefulness of the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB), with the addition of personal norm, environmental concern, and problem awareness, in predicting intention was tested. All TPB constructs were significant predictors and explained 54% and 36% of the variance in intention to walk and cycle respectively. The additional constructs made a small but significant contribution in explaining variance in intention (together, an additional 6% and 4% respectively). Based on the between-subjects design, the acceptability levels of proposed Park-and-Ride policies was low. Perceived effectiveness and fairness significantly influenced the acceptability of policies. Policy-makers may find these results useful in considering how to increase the acceptability of Park-and-Ride policies in future. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Unknown Antarctic New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Human Geography not elsewhere classified
Park-and-Ride
Public transport
Parking
Multi-modal
Walking
Cycling
Policy acceptability
Wellington
New Zealand
School: School of Geography
Environment and Earth Sciences
Unit: Antarctic Research Centre
160499 Human Geography not elsewhere classified
960302 Climate Change Mitigation Strategies
889899 Environmentally Sustainable Transport not elsewhere classified
Degree Discipline: Environmental Studies
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Environmental Studies
spellingShingle Human Geography not elsewhere classified
Park-and-Ride
Public transport
Parking
Multi-modal
Walking
Cycling
Policy acceptability
Wellington
New Zealand
School: School of Geography
Environment and Earth Sciences
Unit: Antarctic Research Centre
160499 Human Geography not elsewhere classified
960302 Climate Change Mitigation Strategies
889899 Environmentally Sustainable Transport not elsewhere classified
Degree Discipline: Environmental Studies
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Environmental Studies
Ryan, Nicola (11799587)
Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
topic_facet Human Geography not elsewhere classified
Park-and-Ride
Public transport
Parking
Multi-modal
Walking
Cycling
Policy acceptability
Wellington
New Zealand
School: School of Geography
Environment and Earth Sciences
Unit: Antarctic Research Centre
160499 Human Geography not elsewhere classified
960302 Climate Change Mitigation Strategies
889899 Environmentally Sustainable Transport not elsewhere classified
Degree Discipline: Environmental Studies
Degree Level: Masters
Degree Name: Master of Environmental Studies
description In response to the environmental, economic and social costs associated with over-reliance on the private car, planners and policy-makers are promoting Park-and-Ride, or the combined use of car and public transport. Despite Park-and-Ride’s growing popularity, little has been written on the subject in the New Zealand context. This thesis addresses this gap. Its objective is to understand the behaviour of commuters in order to inform the development of policies to increase walking and cycling to and from the station. It uses a mixed methods approach, based on stakeholder interviews and an online survey conducted in Greater Wellington. Interviews with eight stakeholders involved in public transport planning and policy sought to provide insight into the challenges of implementing Park-and-Ride and how the concept can be developed in the future. More effective management of parking was seen as a key challenge for those tasked with making policy decisions. Stakeholders also discussed the potential for developing the concept, particularly by transitioning Park-and-Ride into interchanges for motorised and non-motorised transport modes, with priority given to walking and cycling access. A survey conducted among 295 respondents who commuted to Wellington City sought to explore the psychological and contextual factors in predicting the intention to walk and cycle to the train station. The usefulness of the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB), with the addition of personal norm, environmental concern, and problem awareness, in predicting intention was tested. All TPB constructs were significant predictors and explained 54% and 36% of the variance in intention to walk and cycle respectively. The additional constructs made a small but significant contribution in explaining variance in intention (together, an additional 6% and 4% respectively). Based on the between-subjects design, the acceptability levels of proposed Park-and-Ride policies was low. Perceived effectiveness and fairness significantly influenced the acceptability of policies. Policy-makers may find these results useful in considering how to increase the acceptability of Park-and-Ride policies in future.
format Thesis
author Ryan, Nicola (11799587)
author_facet Ryan, Nicola (11799587)
author_sort Ryan, Nicola (11799587)
title Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
title_short Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
title_full Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
title_fullStr Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
title_full_unstemmed Towards a More Comprehensive Picture of Park-And-Ride: A Mixed Methods Study of Stakeholder Perspectives and Transport Behaviour in Greater Wellington
title_sort towards a more comprehensive picture of park-and-ride: a mixed methods study of stakeholder perspectives and transport behaviour in greater wellington
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1
geographic Antarctic
New Zealand
geographic_facet Antarctic
New Zealand
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Towards_a_More_Comprehensive_Picture_of_Park-And-Ride_A_Mixed_Methods_Study_of_Stakeholder_Perspectives_and_Transport_Behaviour_in_Greater_Wellington/17132261
doi:10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1
op_rights Author Retains Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17132261.v1
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