Air Taxi Skyport Location Problem for Airport Access
Srushti Rath, Joseph Y.J. Chow

TL;DR
This paper develops a model for optimal skyport placement for air taxis accessing airports, considering user behavior, cost, and revenue, with a case study in New York City demonstrating practical insights.
Contribution
It introduces a modified p-hub median model incorporating mode choice behavior for skyport location planning, addressing trade-offs between trip length and cost.
Findings
At least 9 skyports are needed for NYC to meet demand.
Skyport locations are stable against increased transfer times.
The model helps strategize infrastructure investments for air taxi services.
Abstract
Witnessing the rapid progress and accelerated commercialization made in recent years for the introduction of air taxi services in near future across metropolitan cities, our research focuses on one of the most important consideration for such services, i.e., infrastructure planning (also known as skyports). We consider design of skyport locations for air taxis accessing airports, where we present the skyport location problem as a modified single-allocation p-hub median location problem integrating choice-constrained user mode choice behavior into the decision process. Our approach focuses on two alternative objectives i.e., maximizing air taxi ridership and maximizing air taxi revenue. The proposed models in the study incorporate trade-offs between trip length and trip cost based on mode choice behavior of travelers to determine optimal choices of skyports in an urban city. We examine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAviation Industry Analysis and Trends · Transportation and Mobility Innovations · Transportation Planning and Optimization
