SFUVancouver |
Dec 28, 2014 2:16 AM |
The Hong Kong Airport Express also makes stops and costs about the same as the UPX, so there's precedent for a (mostly) express airport train at that price point.
As for the Canada Line, they designed the interior layout of the cars to allow for baggage, and the generous seat spacing easily allows for one to roll a suitcase on the floor between the seat and the seatback in front and put carry-on on the seat. There's also ample aisle space, certainly enough to have a bag beside oneself when seated without impeding people's ability to walk, and there are very large open areas around the central pair of doors and through the accordion joint. But by no stretch of the imagination is it an express train. It's a regular metro with the airport as the terminus station for one of the line's branches. Plus the SkyTrain Canada Line fare, which includes a $5 'add fare' when one purchases at the airport, gets one access to the entire transit system for up to 90 minutes, so transfers to local buses and other SkyTrain lines potentially incur no additional costs, depending on whether one originally purchased a 1, 2, or 3 zone fare.
Within a year of opening (with atrocious airport signage at the time of inauguration) the line was moving about a sixth (15%) of travellers to and from the airport and a not-insignificant (and never quite quantified) proportion of staff. It's a bit tricky to be precise, and there haven't been any updated numbers of which I am aware, since the airport also relocated its staff parking to a series of lots at one of the stations on Sea Island. One can ride free between stations on Sea Island, so it functions as a people mover for staff to and from the terminal and freed up valuable space closer to the terminal for pay parking and future terminal expansion. The airport fee that is added onto one's transit fare only applies when leaving the terminal, so one can pay up to $8.75, but return for as little as $2.75, even less if they're a senior or kid.
Reducing and relocating their parking requirements was a very big part of why the Airport signed on and put serious money into the Canada Line. They also wanted to make sure that the line did not interfere with the long-term airport Master Plan, which includes an eastern taxiway over the road and rail corridor to connect the airport's two primary runways. Plus they are planning non-aeronautical revenue generators around the stations, including the under-construction MacArthurGlen Designer Premium Outlet mall. The airport already makes in the ~60% range of its budget from non-aeronautical revenue and their goal is 70%+, so leveraging the Canada Line for additional retail, education, institutional, and office development is a big deal.
In Metro Vancouver, where 90%+ of all new non-downtown office construction is within 500m of SkyTrain Station, there's now a massive cliff (like 25%+) for non-downtown commercial office lease rates if you build office outside of that magic 500m radius. This also means there is a significant premium to be realized if you can create product in such a radius, especially relatively close to the downtown core like a Sea Island station location. The Airport proximity adds a bit too for users without a lot of choice in new product near the airport.
If travelling with the hoi polli is a touch too much - as it often is with baggage for anything other than a quick trip - then an express train with luggage space or a taxi is undoubtedly a favourable option.
|