An airport tram link would more then likely go as close as possible to the terminal. The tram in the city already passes several of the city’s major hotels. Hilton, a whole host of hotels on north terrace, and several along king William st. A city loop would bring more hotels within the tram network.SBD wrote: ↑Mon Aug 20, 2018 2:08 pmBusiness travellers and inbound tourists might mostly want the CBD, but if they are not prepared to walk to SDBD to catch a passing tram, they probably don't want to walk far the other end either. The Melbourne Airport Bus system takes you right to the door of almost any CBD hotel you need, but not down St Kilda Rd, and only to the set list of places they go (I needed to name a hotel to use it to visit my Dad in hospital as they would not drop off at the hospital, but would happily drop me at the hotel opposite once I worked out its name). Many business travellers will use taxis as it saves them having to learn to navigate in a strange city at all.
A lot of what I’m reading here amounts to “change, therefore locals won’t like it”. That’s exactly what’s wrong with this town. Too many scared of change too scared of moving an inch out of their comfort zone and daily routine. I’m surprised we even have any need for an international airport lol.Outbound passengers don't typically start from the Adelaide CBD, so having luggage support for the spoke from the CBD to the airport is only useful in our hub-and-spoke transport network if all the other spokes can handle us bringing our luggage to the CBD and transferring to the airport line. Adelaide doesn't generally deal well with bringing a big suitcase on our public transport, so nobody tries. We drive to the airport or lean on a friend to drop us off/pick us up if we don't like the taxi fares from home.
How many of what kinds of people might use a tram with a dead-end stop at the airport plaza/hotel? I doubt it's a whole tramload per day!
We need big bold projects to shock the towns folk out of their country town slumber.