Parkiteer is a secure bike parking system being implemented at train stations across Victoria, Australia. It consists of a locked cage with bike parking systems, solar power, and electronic access controls. Over 40 Parkiteer cages have been installed, which has led to reductions in bikes on trains, especially during peak times. Utilization of the cages has remained high, with an average of over 100 bikes parked per week. Surveys found that 40% of users previously commuted by car but switched to cycling with Parkiteer. The system aims to promote multimodal transit use and more sustainable commuting options.
2. Train patronage at historic highs
FirstWorldWar
Firstelectrificationscheme
openedprogressivelyfrom1919to1923
GreatDepression
SecondWorldWar-nopatronagereported
Suburbanservicesweresuspendedfor34daysduetostrikes
suburban'20milelimitdropped;PetrolrationingendsFeb1950
Allservicessuspendedfor55daysduetostrikes
Dandenong-Pakenhamelectrifiedforcoaltraffic
1956OlympicGames
CreditSqueeze
UpperFerntreeGully-Belgraveelectrified
Recession
SuburbanservicesextendedtoPakenham
Burnleyloopopens,Comengtrainsenterservice
The'Met'formed,last'redrattler'withdrawn
AltonaLoopopens
Lastofthefourcityloopsopens
PortMelbourneandStKildalinesclosed.
Recession
Cranbourneelectrificationopens
Franchising-ConnexandNationalExpress
Sydenhamelectrificationopens
Re-franchising-Connexassumescontrolofentirenetwork
Craigieburnelectricficationopens
0
50
100
150
200
250
1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s
Boardings(millions)
Neutral Events
Events likely to have a positive effect on patronage
Events likely to have a negative effect on patronage
Estimated Metropolitan Train Patronage
2008-09 revised
forecast 220.1 million
boardings
Prior to 1982-83 patronage was enumerated as journeys derived from ticket sales. Figures prior to this
date have been factored up by 5% to allow for journeys involving more than one train boarding.
Note:
3. Access to railway stations
Source: Metlink OD Survey (2006)
Access mode Number %
Bicycle 5,266 1.6%
Bus 32,558 10%
Car (driver) 54,966 16.9%
Car (passenger) 39,084 12.0%
Train 14,631 4.5%
Tram 9,717 3.0%
Walked 169,435 52.0%
TOTAL 325,658 100.0%
4. Market segmentation
There are three distinct cycling markets that
combine bike riding with public transport:
1.‘Bike and Ride’ – cycle from home to entry
station
2.‘Bike and Ride and Bike’ – cycle to entry
station, take bike on train, cycle from exit
station
3.‘Ride and Bike’ – cycle from exit station to
destination
5. Is promoting ‘bike and ride’
commuting good for rail users?
• Riding to the station reduces time-based
‘interchange penalties’ from:
Walking to the station or feeder mode
(bus/tram) stop
Journey times on feeder modes
• Door-to-door journey times for riding on
short (2-3 km) trips are comparable with
car travel on local roads
• Wider health benefits from active
transport use
6. Case Study: Bike journey times
comparable to car
Door-to-door travel times
for sample 2.8km
journey to Werribee
station:
Bus – 20 minutes (includes
walking & waiting time)
Bike – 13 minutes
(includes Parkiteer
lock-up time & walk to
station entrance)
Car – 11 minutes (includes
search for parking &
walk to station
entrance)
7. Why is promoting ‘bike and
ride’ commuting good public
transport policy?
For rail operators ‘bike and ride’ can:
• Increase train capacity by removing
bikes from peak period trains
• Intensify land use around stations
• Reduce pressure on station car parking
8. Case Study: Intensifying land
use at stations
How much is parking 26 vehicles really costing us?
Gross
Area
Gross Area
per vehicle
Total Cost
Cost per
vehicle
26 Car
Spaces
365m2 14.04m2 $390,000 $15,000
26 Bike
Lockers
138m2 5.3m2 $65,000 $2,500
Parkiteer Cage
(26 bikes)
35m2 1.35m2 $90,000 $3,462
Parkiteer lands 26 bikes in 1/10th
the area of 26 car spaces and
1/4 the area of 26 bike lockers
11. Why Parkiteer?
Poor siting and perceived insecurity of formal parking
leads to ‘informal’ parking at stations. This creates
potential pedestrian and DDA access issues.
12. Why Parkiteer?
Lockers – many drawbacks including:
• Low patronage and perceptions of insecurity
• Low utilisation (2008 audit showed 19% utilisation)
• Space hungry and difficult to effectively manage
13. What is Parkiteer?
Parkiteer is a ‘machine ensemble’ made up of:
• Structural elements (the cage)
• Bike parking systems (rails and racks)
• Power supply (solar or shore power)
• Access controls (electronic door lock/
swipe card access)
• Control systems (back to base monitoring)
16. Control system
• Back to base monitoring
• Remote control access control
• 24 hour user support
17. Parkiteer rolls out
There are 43 Parkiteer cages currently in use.
There have been two main waves of Parkiteer
cages:
• Late 2008 – 20 cages (16 metro/4 regional)
• Mid 2009 – 15 cages (11 metro/4 regional)
Eight additional cages have rolled out as part
of station upgrades or new stations.
18. Marketing Parkiteer
Parkiteer has been
marketed to users
through:
• Bike locker waiting lists
at stations with Parkiteer
• Bicycle Victoria’s
members and ‘friends’
database
• VTP-themed signage on
cages with website links
• Signage referring to SMS
callback service
19. Evaluating Parkiteer
Evaluation is still in progress, however
useful performance measures include:
• Some reduction of bikes on trains,
especially in peak periods
• High Parkiteer utilisation levels
• Conversion of car drivers and car
passengers to cyclists through Parkiteer
(average 40%)
Additionally, useful data has been gained
on who uses cages.
20. Bikes on trains are steady or
decreasing, especially at peak times
Bikes on metro trains trends: Bikes observed at cordon stations -
May 2007 to October 2009
0
50
100
150
200
250
May-07 Oct-07 May-08 Oct-08 May-09 Oct-09
Linear (Inter Peak (2 pm to 4pm) from City)
Linear (Inter Peak (9am to 12pm) to City)
Linear (AM Peak (7am to 9am) to City)
Linear (Pre AM Peak (6am to 7am) to City)
Linear (PM Peak (4pm - 7pm) from City)
Linear (Post PM Peak (7pm-10pm) from City)
21. Utilisation levels remain high
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
02/03/2009
-06/03/2009
16/03/2009-20/03/2009
30/03/2009-03/04/2009
13/04/2009-17/04/2009
27/05/2009-01/05/2009
11/05/2009
-15/05/2009
25/05/2009-29/05/2009
08/06/2009
-12/06/2009
22/06/2009-26/06/2009
06/07/2009-10/07/2009
20/07/2009-24/07/2009
03/08/2009-07/08/2009
17/08/2009
-21/08/2009
31/08/2009-04/09/2009
14/09/2009
-18/09/2009
28/09/2009-02/10/2009
12/10/2009
-16/10/2009
26/10/2009-30/10/2009
09/11/2009-13/11/2009
23/11/2009
-27/11/2009
07/12/2009-11/12/2009
21/12/2009
-25/12/2009
04/01/2010-08/01/2010
18/01/2010-22/01/2010
01/02/2010-05/02/2010
15/02/2010-19/02/2010
01/03/2010
-05/03/2010
15/03/2010-19/03/2010
29/03/2010
-02/04/2010
12/04/2010-16/04/2010
26/04/2010-30/04/2010
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Cage Users No of Cages
Easter School holidaysQueens b'day
School holidays
Incentive schemeSchool holidays
Melb Cup
Christmas/New Year
Aust Day Week
Labor DayWeek
Easter School Holidays
Parkiteer average weekly usage: March 2009 – April 2010
22. Parkiteer – converting motorists
into cyclists?
• 40% of cage users
previously travelled
by car (as driver or
passenger)
• 32% of cage users
already rode to the
station
• On an average
weekday, 100 car
spaces a day across
the rail network are
freed up by motorists
cycling to the station
Car (as Driver)
29%
Car (as Passenger)
12%
Bus
5%
Bike
32%
Walk
14%
Other
8%
N= 1263 Source: Bicycle Victoria (2010)
24. Who’s using Parkiteer?
Parkiteer cage users - Age profile
0.2%
4.8%
21.0%
30.7%
32.2%
9.3%
1.5%
0.2%
0.2%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 35.0%
5 to 11
12 to 17
18 to 24
25 to 34
35 to 49
50 to 59
60 to 69
70 to 79
80 or over
Over 80% of cage users are aged 18-49
N= 1263. Source: Bicycle Victoria (2010)