Submitted Successfully!
To reward your contribution, here is a gift for you: A free trial for our video production service.
Thank you for your contribution! You can also upload a video entry or images related to this topic.
Version Summary Created by Modification Content Size Created at Operation
1 + 2816 word(s) 2816 2022-01-24 09:56:57 |
2 Format correct Meta information modification 2816 2022-01-25 02:16:39 |

Video Upload Options

Do you have a full video?

Confirm

Are you sure to Delete?
Cite
If you have any further questions, please contact Encyclopedia Editorial Office.
Peira, G. Railway and Tourism. Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/18714 (accessed on 02 May 2024).
Peira G. Railway and Tourism. Encyclopedia. Available at: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/18714. Accessed May 02, 2024.
Peira, Giovanni. "Railway and Tourism" Encyclopedia, https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/18714 (accessed May 02, 2024).
Peira, G. (2022, January 24). Railway and Tourism. In Encyclopedia. https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/18714
Peira, Giovanni. "Railway and Tourism." Encyclopedia. Web. 24 January, 2022.
Railway and Tourism
Edit

From the second half of the 20th century, numerous railways, especially in industrial and mining areas, were abandoned for economic reasons. The activism of the “railfans”, who are fond of trains, has made it possible to set up voluntary associations that have been the lifeblood of the beginning of projects for the recovery of the historic railway heritage and the promotion of it in a touristic sense. The railway tourism process always originates from a project for the restoration of railway heritage, possibly maintaining authenticity. The voluntary associations, along with their “railfans”, are the main stakeholder, not only preserving the rail heritage but also developing railway tourism activities. The touristic railway could regenerate the local community, with positive benefits on the local economy. Many tourists could be attracted by railway tourism destinations in that they wish to live memorable experiences related to the nostalgia of the past. 

tourist travel railway transport tourism development tourist perception heritage tourism train steam trains

1. Introduction

From the mid-nineteenth century, the railway system contributed to the development of the industrial revolution and made it possible to significantly reduce travel time between cities. Some of these trains became iconic for their luxury, such as the Orient Express, the Trans-Siberian, the Ghan and the Blue Train, and continue to retain their appeal in international railway history [1][2][3].
From the end of the 1950s, many railways were closed or downsized for economic reasons in some European countries. In particular, the British railway model, despite having been emulated in many parts of the world, was on the one hand praised for promoting a high density of lines, but on the other criticized for the costly duplication of routes. This situation led to a systemic inefficiency, whose weaknesses are to be found in regulation and flaws in government policy [4].
The passage of the railway as a tourist resource is a debated topic in many parts of the world [5][6]. These places have a transitory nature, and the railway has allowed, in the past, a process of economic development, for example with industrial settlements. The economic dynamics in question involve evolution of these places, and railway tourism could represent a differentiation in the local system [7][8][9][10]. An essential stakeholder in this possible step is voluntary associations. Some of these originated in the United Kingdom, for the rescue, restoration and management of railway heritage in order, in some cases, to use it for tourism purposes [11]. Talyllyn Railway in Wales was the first tourist railway [12]. This British model was disseminated in other European countries [13][14].
Railway tourism has shown positive dynamics in recent years [15]. According to the data of the European Federation of Tourist Railways (FEDECRAIL) in 2014, there were more than 5200 route kilometres (www.fedecrail.org/en/index_en.html, accessed on 13 December 2021) of tourist railways. France has almost as much, with 1200 km, followed by Austria, with 1100 km, and Great Britain, with 890 km. Moreover, there was found to be a workforce of some 35,000 volunteers, of which 19,100 were in the UK, and there were also 4000 paid staff. Railway tourism is still not very representative in Italy, Portugal and Spain. Lastly, there were an estimated 20 million annual travellers.
As a product, railway tourism should seek to enhance travel experiences, including nostalgia, a sense of history and authenticity. Furthermore, in the experiential travel scene, it is necessary to implement services that can respond to travellers’ expectations [16][17][18][19]. These expectations rise when there is an association with the word “luxury” [20][21]. These factors, together with others such as sustainability, must be implemented and promoted in the tourism product, as they are mainly sought after by the new generations [22][23][24][25]. The process for the development of a railway tourism product must, over time, involve all the actors in the community of the tourist destination [26][27][28]. Most rail tourism initiatives have been developed thanks to public financial funds, although entrepreneurial initiatives will need to be set up in the lifecycle of the long-term tourist destination [29][30]. Developing tourism for economic diversification in regions not suited to this sector requires fundamental changes to previous ways of operating, including new approaches to business creation, capacity building, education and knowledge exchange, networking and public-private interactions [31][32][33].
Given the interest in the recovery and enhancement of railway heritage for tourism purposes, the authors considered it important to investigate in what terms the researchers contributed to the description of the aspects and to the identification of the key characteristics of railway tourism.
Three questions are raised here.
  • R.S.1 What are the main dynamics in the recovery and management of railway heritage?
  • R.S.2 What are the main trends in rail tourism?
  • R.S.3 What are the main relationships between sustainability and rail tourism?

2. Railway and Tourism: Answers to the Three Questions

R.S.1. What are the main dynamics in the recovery and management of railway heritage?
From the end of the 1950s, many European countries decided for economic reasons to cut numerous railways, which were partly downsized or abandoned, especially those that connected industrial and mining sites [34][35][36].
This situation made “railfans” aware of the railway issues that invited governments to preserve their railway heritage [37]. Railway heritage, as well as industrial heritage, due to a different ideological vision linked to industrial culture as a phenomenon of national pride, had been valued above all in Anglo-Saxon countries such as the United Kingdom, which led the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century [38][39]. “Railfans” actively participated in the birth of numerous voluntary associations with the aim of managing the historic railways of many European countries [40]. Volunteering was mainly active in civil societies where collective identity revolved around the phenomenon of industry and the railway [38].
Volunteering is considered as a real “lifeblood” [41] that keeps the world of railway heritage alive [42]. Some studies have underlined the volunteers’ socio-demographic profile: predominantly male, over 50 years of age and a good level of income and education, many of them being engineers. They are “railfans”, fond of photography of historical railways. Many volunteers, now retirees, make good use of their time in their “second life” through their hobby of the world of railways [43]. The key motivations of volunteers are altruism towards the community, a means of escape from everyday life and the need to feel useful, but many are also motivated by sociability, leisure and fun [44][45]. The findings of one study highlighted the dilemma faced by managers of voluntary associations. On the one hand, there was the desire for greater efficiency and professionalism in the various activities such as restoration and hospitality, which implied management approaches with paid human resources, while on the other hand, the “spirit of volunteering” implied a “gratuitousness” in performance [40].
Some scholars carried out studies analyzing programs of recovery for the railway heritage. The FEDECRAIL (European Federation of Museum & Tourist Railways) played an important role in bringing together in a single association most of those present in various European countries with the aim of developing common programs to safeguard and promote railway heritage [39]. The “Conrail system” association in the US was founded with the goal of providing funding and subsidies for the restoration and preservation of railroad-related equipment and objects, including reactivating railroads. Furthermore, this association stimulated the governments of the individual US states to allocate economic resources for this purpose [35]. Other railway heritage recovery initiatives, such as those dedicated to buildings, locomotives and lines, have been built in Romania, Ethiopia and Taiwan. In some cases, the rolling stock was in good condition, while in others the interventions were carried out without in-depth technical knowledge [46][47][48][49].
Recovery activities aimed at railway heritage were highly inhomogeneous in various European countries. Among the main factors were a lack of financial resources, location of the tourist destination, a diversity of ideological vision, neglect of the heritage of the area and the absence of civic pride [50][51][52][53][54]. Dragan et al. highlighted in their study a dilemma over the recovery of some Polish railways. The good state of conservation of the railway heritage there, even in the absence of a strong industrial culture and national pride on the theme of railways, could be a source of inconvenience for the community, as the railways recall bad memories, linked to the subjugation and colonization of Poland.
R.S.2. What are the main trends in rail tourism?
In recent years, railway heritage has become, in many countries, a tourist asset, giving a second life to railways, trains and railway buildings by making them tourist attractions [52][55]. Notably, a few industrial areas in Europe have developed railway tourism, with countless advantages for the local economy [39][41].
The fulfilment of railway tourism destinations was a long and complicated process. It was necessary to carry out some market surveys on which to build in order for the tourist destination to be successful for a long time [42].
Safeguarding the historic railway heritage could also have an educational and recreational element [56]. Train journeys of the past were recreated using original locomotives and carriages [57]. These were a way to evoke nostalgia for the past [58], even if the impossibility of being able to recreate it in a perfect and accurate way leads to a romanticization of the heritage [50]. Conservation is highly influenced by reality, and its value depends on human interpretation [59].
Most studies focused their investigations on the quality and attractiveness of the destination, leaving out research on the intrinsic characteristics of travel [59][60][61]. Su et al. [55] pointed out that the trip and the destination have the same importance. Moreover, the train was the main vehicle from which to appreciate the landscape.
Rail tourism was primarily linked to the travel experience, being slow, cultural, heritage-based and a much more dynamic form of tourism than mass tourism [39]. Railway heritage could attract both the young and old generations looking for new experiences, or with nostalgia for past memories [62].
The exploration of the relationships between motivation, nostalgia and a memorable tourist experience revealed how the feeling of nostalgia is a mediator between personal emotion and a memorable experience [58]. The ability of marketing to harness the appeal of nostalgia to increase the attractiveness of heritage consists in the attempt to induce nostalgia with the re-enactment of the past, or to produce cultural memory [50][58][63].
Travelling on a steam train can evoke memories of the past with the whistle of the locomotive or conductor [59]. Working on nostalgia in a tourism product means staging authenticity or a convincing scene, in which the visitor perceives it as authentic. The results of some studies have shown that visitors have considered the experience as not authentic, but similar to a show [59][64].
Among the categories of actors, residents have a central role in transmitting to tourists the values of local cultural identity, which could help the development of the tourist railway [65].
Taylor et al. [66] focused their study on the role of actors in the planning process of a railway tourist destination. According to them, there are three distinct phases. In the first, the main activities are the development of the idea of a railway line, acceptance of the proposal by the interested parties, the finding of the necessary financial capital and renovation, ensuring the safety of the old infrastructure. In the second phase, it is necessary to develop accommodation and tourist reception services, whilst in the last phase, it is necessary to create an agreement with all the stakeholders for effective governance of the destination.
R.S.3. What are the main relationships between sustainability and rail tourism?
In the past, the relationship between tourism and territory was almost exclusively based on economic issues; later, however, the consequences and long-term transformations that tourism has wrought on the natural environment and societies, in particular on mobility, began to be considered with greater attention.
The train could be one of the most suitable vehicles for sustainable mobility. Therefore it was necessary to increase the awareness of tourists in the use of the train, trying to reduce the use of other means of transport such as the car and the plane [67]. Policies on sustainable mobility in some countries are trying to encourage train use for both the population and tourists [68]. In this new scenario, the tourist railway should stimulate the railway market by emphasizing both the values of railway heritage and the quality of the travel experience [41][69].
The results of the research on the Qinghai-Tibet railway have highlighted, on the one hand, the benefits to the local economy, thanks above all to tourists, while on the other hand, they have shown that the railway has caused an increase in human pressures on the mountain ecosystem [49][66].
The process of revitalizing a particular piece of railway heritage is similar in most areas, but success or failure depends on the economic dimension [56]. To start a recovery project it is necessary to encourage the railfans to form an association [37][41]. This should raise awareness among public bodies, which are often reluctant to invest in railway heritage, regardless of its cultural importance [70]. The planning of the recovery activities for railways, trains and railway buildings, in addition to the substantial financial resources necessary, should include an evaluation with the State, with the approval of specific rules relating to the safety of train traffic and to the environmental impact of historic trains and the construction provisions that allowed this heritage to be used for tourism purposes [39][42][56]. However, the results of some studies show that the lack of financial resources is the main concern in the restoration of railway heritage, as well as the use of it later [43][71]. It was also necessary to carry out a cost-benefit analysis for local communities [72].
In addition to the costly restoration and maintenance of railway material, it should also be noted that the tourist railways will have to achieve economic sustainability in the long term, keeping under control some factors that could negatively influence their budgets, such as the seasonality of the tourist product and the disproportion between the number of resources necessary for the functioning of the train and the number of passengers [39].
The results of some research carried out on some tourist railways underlined the positive economic effects on the local economy, which lasted for a long time [41][58][73]. A successful case of rail tourism was the “Jacobite”, a historic Welsh steam train that inspired the Hogwarts Express in the Harry Potter saga. The organizers of the Harry Potter festival used the opportunity to include the Jacobite among the tourist attractions designed to immerse the thousands and thousands of visitors in the fabulous world of the wizard [44].
On the other hand, some railway tourist destinations have had a short life cycle. In the initial phase, they received huge funding to restore the railways, but after a short time, the interest of tourists greatly diminished. These tourist destinations fell into decline [56][74].
Although most governments are reluctant to invest in rail assets, there are many development projects for certain tourist destinations [75]. The concept of economic sustainability is increasingly considered in tourism planning. Jiang et al. [76] applied a heritage assessment methodology for six railway destinations in an attempt to provide a comprehensive approach to sustainable tourism development. The results provide useful information to policymakers on the real and potential value of tourist destinations.

3. Conclusions

Railways can play a significant role in developing the attractiveness of a tourist destination and could act as a catalyst for territorial branding. Not only do they have natural, historical and patrimonial value, but they also contribute to the development of local communities, including the creation of jobs, the improvement of living standards and opportunities for cultural exchange.
Notably, the tourist railway could help to regenerate above all small local communities, some of which have been affected, for example, by a process of deindustrialization. If well-managed, tourism diversification could have positive economic impacts.
Furthermore, many tourists could be attracted by railway tourism destinations by a wish to live memorable experiences, related to the nostalgia of the past. In this context, the authors developed this systemic review aiming to consolidate knowledge of railway tourism at the international level. The findings highlighted that the railway tourism process always originates from a project of restoration of the railway heritage, possibly maintaining authenticity. The voluntary associations are the main stakeholder, not only for preserving the rail heritage but also for developing the railway tourism activities. Currently, the most meaningful railway tourism projects are in Europe, such as in Germany, Switzerland and Great Britain. Some railways have also been transformed into railway cycle lanes for cyclists, wheelchairs and buggies.
Herein provided a framework of knowledge that is useful for setting future research on rail tourism in countries where this aspect is less development, such as, for example, in Italy. Among the potential research lines, a topic could be how the railway industry and cultural and heritage bodies can best coordinate their efforts and their skills in order to promote the tourism product, territorial attractiveness and tourism development. Other potential topics include which tools could be used to create quality and value experiences for potential customers during their rail tourism trips and how digitalization can help add value to the customer experience.

References

  1. Murphy, K.K.; Waxman, B. Orient express. Mark. Health Serv. 2007, 27, 10.
  2. Browne, J.R. Along the Old Ghan Line: A Guide to Discovering the Old Ghan Railway; Jeremy R Browne: Adelaide, Australia, 2020; pp. 1–283.
  3. Gross, S.; Klemmer, L. Rail in Introduction to Tourism Transport; CABI: Wallingford, UK, 2014; pp. 105–129.
  4. Casson, M. World’s First Railway System: Enterprise, Competition, and Regulation on the Railway Network in Victorian Britain; Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK, 2009.
  5. Dickinson, J.E.; Lumsdon, L. Slow Travel and Tourism, 1st ed.; Routledge: London, UK, 2010; pp. 1–232.
  6. UIC (International Union of railways). Guidelines on How to Increase Attractiveness for Rail Tourism 2020. Available online: https://toprail.org/IMG/pdf/20200331_guidelines_on_how_to_increase_attractiveness_for_rail_tourism.pdf (accessed on 29 August 2021).
  7. Reinius, S.W. A ticket to national parks? Tourism, railways, and the establishment of national parks in Sweden. In Tourism and National Parks: International Perspectives on Development, Histories and Change; Routledge: London, UK, 2012; pp. 184–196.
  8. Cinelli, I.; Anfuso, G.; Privitera, S.; Pranzini, E. An Overview on Railway Impacts on Coastal Environment and Beach Tourism in Sicily (Italy). Sustainability 2021, 13, 7068.
  9. Princz-Jakovics, T.; Vasvári, G. Tourism focused analysis of narrow-gauge railways in Hungary. Deturope 2019, 11, 80–92.
  10. Akbulut, G.; Artvinli, E. Effects of Turkish railway museums on cultural tourism. Proc. Soc. Behav. Sci. 2011, 19, 131–138.
  11. Amato, C.; Bevilacqua, G.; Ravagnan, C. The abandoned railway heritage: From problem to opportunity for the regeneration of minor historic centres. Smart Innov. Syst. Technol. 2021, 178, 1735–1745.
  12. World Tourism Organization. UNWTO Tourism Highlights 2, 18; UNWTO: Madrid, Spain, 2018.
  13. Hume, J. The railway heritage and Historic Scotland. In Conserving the Railway Heritage; Taylor & Francis: Abingdon, UK, 2014; pp. 155–164.
  14. Evans, A.K.B.; Gough, J.V. Tourism and the railways in Scotland: The Victorian and Edwardian experience. In The Impact of the Railway on Society in Britain: Essays in Honour of Jack Simmons; Routledge: London, UK, 2003; pp. 199–210.
  15. Flash Eurobarometer 463. Europeans’ Satisfaction with Passenger Rail Services; European Commission: Brussels, Belgium, 2018.
  16. Prideaux, B. Tracks to tourism: Queenland rail joins the tourist industry. Int. J. Tour. Res. 1999, 1, 73–86.
  17. Dang, L.; von Arx, W. How can rail use for leisure and tourism be promoted? Using leisure and mobility orientations to segment Swiss railway customers. Sustainability 2021, 13, 5813.
  18. Conlin, M.V.; Bird, G.R. Railway Heritage and Tourism: Global Perspectives; Channel View Publications: Bristol, UK, 2014; pp. 1–298.
  19. Giachino, C.; Pattanaro, G.; Bertoldi, B.; Bollani, L.; Bonadonna, A. Nature-based solutions and their potential to attract the young generations. Land Use Policy 2021, 101, 105176.
  20. Manhas, P.S.; Gupta, S. Synergizing Indian hospitality services and luxury: Augmenting perception and experience of Indian Luxury Trains. Indian J. Appl. Hosp. Tour. Res. 2017, 9, 69–76. Available online: https://bcihmct.ac.in/download/IJAHTR/IJAHTR-2017.pdf (accessed on 29 August 2021).
  21. Thirumaran, K.; Raghav, M. Luxury tourism, developing destinations: Research review and trajectories. Asian J. Tour. Res. 2017, 2, 2.
  22. Bonadonna, A.; Giachino, C.; Truant, E. Sustainability and mountain tourism: The millennial’s perspective. Sustainability 2017, 9, 1219.
  23. Serhat, G.; Uzuncan, B. Impossibility of authentic experience? The existential estrangement which turns to performance. J. Tour. Cult. Chang. 2020, 19, 681–695.
  24. Blancheton, B.; Marchi, J.-J. The three systems of rail tourism: French case. Tour. Manag. Perspect. 2013, 5, 31–40.
  25. Gilmore, A.; Carson, D.; Ascenção, M. Sustainable tourism marketing at a World Heritage site. J. Strat. Mark. 2007, 15, 253–264.
  26. Beltramo, R.; Peira, G.; Bonadonna, A. Creating a tourism destination through local heritage: The Stakeholders’ priorities in the Canavese Area (Northwest Italy). Land 2021, 10, 260.
  27. Reeves, C.D.; Dalton, R.; Pesce, G. Context and knowledge for functional buildings from the industrial revolution using heritage railway signal boxes as an exemplar. Hist. Environ. Policy Pract. 2020, 11, 232–257.
  28. Carson, S.; Pennings, M. Performing Cultural Tourism; Routledge: London, UK, 2017; pp. 1–192.
  29. Eimermann, M.; Mattsson, K.T.; Carson, D.A. International tourism entrepreneurs in Swedish peripheries: Compliance and collision with public tourism strategies. Reg. Sci. Policy Pract. 2018, 11, 479–492.
  30. Carson, D.A.; Carson, D.B.; Hodge, H. Understanding local innovation systems in peripheral tourism destinations. Tour. Geogr. 2014, 16, 457–473.
  31. Carson, D.; Carson, D. Why tourism may not be everybody’s business: The challenge of tradition in resource peripheries. Rangel. J. 2011, 33, 373–383.
  32. Prideaux, B.; Thompson, M.; Harwood, S. Renewing and re-invigorating settlements: A role for tourism? In Settlements at the Edge; Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK, 2016; pp. 337–356.
  33. Carson, D.A.; Prideaux, B.; Porter, R.; Vuin, A. Transitioning from a local railway hub to a regional tourism system: The Story of Peterborough, South Australia. In Perspectives on Rural Tourism Geographies; Koster, R., Carson, D., Eds.; Geographies of Tourism and Global Change; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2019; pp. 173–196.
  34. Chiaf, E.; Pezzagno, M. Sustainable tourism and land resources for non-motorised mobility. WIT Trans. Ecol. Environ. 2006, 97, 227–236.
  35. Schwieterman, J. Boxcar blues. Planning 2006, 72, 12–16.
  36. Yiamjanya, S. Industrial heritage along railway corridor: A gear towards tourism development, a case study of Lampang Province, Thailand. E3S Web Conf. 2020, 164, 03002.
  37. Stefanovic, K.; Koster, R. Railfans and railway heritage tourism. Railw. Herit. Tour. Glob. Perspect. 2014, 26–41.
  38. Wallace, T. Working of the Train Gang: Alienation, liminality and communitas in the UK preserved railway sector. Int. J. Heritage Stud. 2006, 12, 218–233.
  39. Muriel-Ramirez, M.J. Institutional foundations of heritage railways: The high cost of low trust in the preservation of merit goods. J. Econ. Issues 2017, 51, 663–687.
  40. Rhoden, S.; Ineson, E.M.; Ralston, R. Volunteer motivation in heritage railways: A study of the West Somerset Railway volunteers. J. Heritage Tour. 2009, 4, 19–36.
  41. White, L. Regional railway revival: Connecting heritage and tourism in the Spa Centre of Australia. Railw. Herit. Tour. Glob. Perspect. 2014, 214–226.
  42. Bird, G.R.; Conlin, M.V. No Terminus in sight: New horizons for heritage railways. Railw. Herit. Tour. 2014, 279–287.
  43. Rees, J.; Jarman, P.; Gwyn, D. The conservation of operational steam locomotives. Ind. Archaeol. Rev. 2010, 32, 91–102.
  44. Hamilton, K.; Alexander, M. Organic community tourism: A co-created approach. Ann. Tour. Res. 2013, 42, 169–190.
  45. Carnicelli, S.; Drummond, S.; Anderson, H. Making the connection using action research: Serious leisure and the Caledonian Railway. J. Heritage Tour. 2020, 16, 615–631.
  46. Hamilton, K.; Alexander, M. Spatial, temporal and social dimensions of a ‘destination-in-motion’. Eur. J. Mark. 2017, 51, 2101–2117.
  47. Kebede, M. Heritage-tourism resources of the Franco-Ethiopian railway in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia. Afr. J. Hosp. Tour. Leis. 2018, 7, 9.
  48. Coroiu, R.; David, D.-C.; Coroiu, O.; Ciupan, C. Inventory and state of conservation survey model for railway heritage: The case of Turda–Abrud (Romania). Ind. Archaeol. Rev. 2020, 42, 114–125.
  49. Zhang, C.; Dai, S.; Xia, H. Reuse of abandoned railways leads to urban regeneration: A tale from a rust track to a Green Corridor in Zhangjiakou. Urban Rail Transit 2020, 6, 104–115.
  50. Henderson, J. Railways as heritage attractions: Singapore’s Tanjong Pagar station. J. Heritage Tour. 2011, 6, 73–79.
  51. Hörz, P.; Richter, M. Preserved as technical monuments, run as tourist attractions: Narrow-gauge railways in the German democratic republic. J. Transp. History 2011, 32, 192–213.
  52. Bhati, A.; Pryce, J.; Chaiechi, T. Industrial railway heritage trains: The evolution of a heritage tourism genre and its attributes. J. Heritage Tour. 2014, 9, 114–133.
  53. Hoekstra, M.S. Iconic architecture and middle class politics of memory in a deindustrialized city. Sociology 2020, 54, 693–710.
  54. Mishra, S.; Chakrabarti, D. Design of a railway station: Creative expression of cultural heritage identity. Smart Innov. Syst. Technol. 2021, 221, 619–629.
  55. Su, M.M.; Wall, G. Destination and en-Route Experiences among Train Travellers to Tibet. Tour. Recreat. Res. 2009, 34, 181–190.
  56. Crapper, M.; Fell, M.; Gammoh, I. Earthworks risk assessment on a heritage railway. Proc. Inst. Civ. Eng.-Geotech. Eng. 2014, 167, 344–356.
  57. Baker, J.C. Mobility, tropicality and landscape: The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, 1881. J. Hist. Geogr. 2014, 44, 133–144.
  58. Lee, Y.-J. Creating memorable experiences in a reuse heritage site. Ann. Tour. Res. 2015, 55, 155–170.
  59. Halsall, D.A. Railway heritage and the tourist gaze: Stoomtram Hoorn–Medemblik. J. Transp. Geogr. 2001, 9, 151–160.
  60. Yeung, W. MTR Disneyland Resort Line—A tourism railway. In Proceedings of the IET International Conference on Railway Engineering 2008 (ICRE 2008), Hong Kong, China, 25–28 March 2008; pp. 100–103.
  61. Kuchiki, A.; Gokan, T.; Maruya, T. Railway-led formation of the agriculture-food-tourism industry cluster: Escaping the Middle-Income Trap. In A Multi-Industrial Linkages Approach to Cluster Building in East Asia; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2017; pp. 187–205.
  62. Michniak, D. Role of railway transport in tourism: Selected problems and examples in Slovakia. Quaest. Geogr. 2016, 35, 107–120.
  63. Bittnerová, D. Tourism of Czech railfans. Remembering the journeys to Romania in the 1980s. Narodop. Rev. 2020, 2, 112–124.
  64. Wallace, T. Went the day well: Scripts, glamour and performance in war-weekends. Int. J. Herit. Stud. 2007, 13, 200–223.
  65. Fei, L.; Jigang, M.; Xianghui, L. Residents’ perceived and expected value of linear cultural heritage: The example of the Yun-nan-Vietnam railway. Trop. Geogr. 2021, 41, 93–103.
  66. Taylor, P.; Frost, W.; Laing, J. Path creation and the role of entrepreneurial actors: The case of the Otago Central Rail Trail. Ann. Tour. Res. 2019, 77, 79–91.
  67. Van Goeverden, C.D. Explaining factors for train use in European long distance travel. Tour. Hosp. Plan. Dev. 2009, 6, 21–37.
  68. Dallen, J. Sustainable transport, market segmentation and tourism: The Looe Valley Branch Line Railway, Cornwall, UK. J. Sustain. Tour. 2007, 15, 180–199.
  69. Niedzielski, M.A.; Malecki, E.J. Making Tracks: Rail networks in world cities. Ann. Assoc. Am. Geogr. 2012, 102, 1409–1431.
  70. Wu, C.; Zhang, N.; Xu, L. Travelers on the railway: An economic growth model of the effects of railway transportation infrastructure on consumption and sustainable economic growth. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6863.
  71. Chaplin, I. Revitalizing community values through railway regeneration in the Asia Pacific region: A tourism research and education approach. In Railway Heritage and Tourism; Channel View Publications: Bristol, UK, 2014; pp. 115–134.
  72. Rovelli, R.; Senes, G.; Fumagalli, N.; Sacco, J.; De Montis, A. From railways to greenways: A complex index for supporting policymaking and planning. A case study in Piedmont (Italy). Land Use Policy 2020, 99, 104835.
  73. Dallen, J. The challenges of diverse visitor perceptions: Rail policy and sustainable transport at the resort destination. J. Transp. Geogr. 2007, 15, 104–115.
  74. Bowker, J.; Bergstrom, J.C.; Gill, J. Estimating the economic value and impacts of recreational trails: A case study of the Virginia Creeper Rail Trail. Tour. Econ. 2007, 13, 241–260.
  75. Taylor, P. What factors make rail trails successful as tourism attractions? Developing a conceptual framework from relevant literature. J. Outdoor Recreat. Tour. 2015, 12, 89–98.
  76. Jiang, P.; Shao, L.; Baas, C. Interpretation of value advantage and sustainable tourism development for railway heritage in China Based on the analytic hierarchy process. Sustainability 2019, 11, 6492.
More
Information
Contributor MDPI registered users' name will be linked to their SciProfiles pages. To register with us, please refer to https://encyclopedia.pub/register :
View Times: 3.8K
Revisions: 2 times (View History)
Update Date: 25 Jan 2022
1000/1000