On Dock Intermodal Rail Facility, Port of Veracruz

Photo: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2012. An on-dock intermodal rail terminal is located adjacent to a port terminal and does not require the container to exit the terminal’s gate to be loaded on a unit train. It does not necessarily mean that the facility is directly located on the dock (although

Roll On / Roll Off Rail Terminal, Port of Gothenburg

Source: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2006. Several ports are handling large amounts of vehicles that are imported and brought by rail to inland markets. In a similar fashion to vehicles being rolled in or rolled off a ship, with a ramp, they can be rolled into a railcar.

Grain Elevator Rail Terminal, Regina, Saskatchewan

Photo: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2011. The grain elevator is a fundamental element of the structuring effect of rail on the resource landscape through the dynamics of collection, sorting, and distribution of grain in agricultural regions. The terminal is simply a rail spur where grain wagons can be loaded on the

Travel Times before and after the Introduction of a High-Speed Rail Service

Source: International Union of Railways High-speed rail has been a technology actively contributing to regional space / time convergence. The setting of high-speed rail systems considerably improved travel times between the metropolitan areas it services, on average, a 50% reduction. In many cases (such as Paris / Lyon on the

Antwerp Centraal Train Station

Source: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2008. The Antwerp Centraal train station, completed in 1905, is considered to be among the world’s most architecturally impressive. However, due to increased ridership and well as the setting of a high-speed train system along the Paris-Brussels-Amsterdam corridor (Thalys), the station was increasingly inadequate. The renovations

TGV Train at Gare de Lyon, Paris, France

Photo: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2001. The locational advantages of central railway stations have led to their usage for high-speed train services, such as Gare de Lyon in Paris, from which high-speed services are calling southern France (Lyon, Avignon, Marseille). The train in the above photo is of the TGV Duplex

Centraal Train Station, Amsterdam

Photo: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2002. Located at the core of the city, the Amsterdam Centraal Train Station is the nexus of regional and long-distance rail services. It is directly linked to the Schiphol Airport with regular services and is at the end of a High-Speed Rail Corridor from Paris (Thalys).

Quai d’Orsay Museum, Paris, France

Photo: Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, 2008. The Quai d’Orsay Museum is an excellent example of the reconversion of a former rail station. The central location of the station by the Seine River and a large amount of available space fit very well the requirements of a world-class museum. The initial terminal

Structuring Effects of Rail Terminals

The three main structuring effects of rail terminals involve adjacency, accessibility and network effects: Adjacency. A structuring effect where land uses directly adjacent to or in close proximity to a rail terminal are strongly influenced and influences the nature and the level of terminal traffic. In sufficient quantity, they form