Print Email Facebook Twitter Night-Time Train Travel Title Night-Time Train Travel: A Stated-Preference study into the Willingness to Use night trains for European long-distance travel Author Heufke Kantelaar, Martijn (TU Delft Civil Engineering and Geosciences) Contributor van Wee, Bert (mentor) Molin, Eric (graduation committee) Cats, Oded (graduation committee) Donners, B. J. H. F. (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Transport, Infrastructure and Logistics Date 2019-08-26 Abstract Limiting climate change forces us to switch to a more sustainable mobility. Travelling by train is more sustainable. Night trains might be a solution, they over several advantages such as a higher comfort level and can travel long-distances during the night. However, there currently is no knowledge about the Willingness to Use night trains. This study is the first into this Willingness to Use night trains, as an alternative for flying, for long-distance European travel. To do so, this paper makes use of two Stated-Preference experiments. A comfort rating experiment, in which the comfort rating is the dependent variable. In this experiment, it is explored to which extent night train characteristics influence the ’perceived comfort’ rating. In the mode choice experiment, it is in turn investigated how this comfort rating is traded-off against more traditional mode choice attributes such as trip time and trip costs. The study presents the results of linear regression and a Panel Mixed Logit model, estimated on 804 collected responses in the Netherlands. The results of both models are combined to derive Willingness-to-Pay values for an improvement in one of the comfort attributes, given an initial comfort level. Furthermore, several segments were identified using a latent class choice model. At last, the Willingness to Use the night train is explored for several scenarios. It is shown that when the night train is introduced as-is, it is predicted to have a market share of about 60%. Positioning the night train as a low-cost competitor results in a significant drop in market share. Subject Night trainPerceived comfortlong-distance mode choicePanel Mixed Logit modelHierarchical Information Integration To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:21e9731a-6ec3-4230-847f-38ffa364ba8a Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2019 Martijn Heufke Kantelaar Files PDF Thesis_Nighttrains_Final_ ... 193_v2.pdf 16.38 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:21e9731a-6ec3-4230-847f-38ffa364ba8a/datastream/OBJ/view