Planning for airports and logistics : case of Dube Tradeport
Date
2020-10
Authors
Hansmann, Robynne Jean
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This study on planning for airports and logistics is concerned with how airports, as
precincts containing specialised infrastructure and related uses, interact with the flow
of goods distributed across multiple modes and transportation networks and land uses
across local, regional, national and global scales. These flows indicate regional
economic activity and have recursive relationships with transport infrastructure and
industrial uses, including warehouses, logistics, business parks, and commercial uses.
The research explores the role of airports to support the distribution of goods between
global and regional economies and interrogates the integration of air cargo logistics in
local production processes.
The purpose of this qualitative case study is to explore the multi-scalar role of airports
in the flow of goods in order to develop a normative framework for planning that
integrates land use and transportation planning towards developmental outcomes. The
international movements of goods originate and terminate in cities at either maritime
port terminals or international airports, and these act as the nodes where international
trade interfaces with regional and local trade flows. The complexity of these global
and regional flows across multiple locations and modes of transportation impacts on
cities, with challenges for better planning for the movement of goods around airports.
Historically, the focus of international trade flows on urban development relates to
ports. However, over the past two decades, air transportation has grown
internationally and airports play a more critical role in the internationalisation and
globalisation of trade, particularly related to the relative value of goods to volume of
goods handled by air as opposed to maritime shipping. The integration of global flows
with local city flows presents complexities for both the management of materials
within the supply chain, as well as the dispersed distribution of goods between places
of production and consumption and within multi-scalar production processes.
Research on the movement of goods and freight distribution is recognised as a
persistent gap within transportation geography; specifically the intersection between transportation planning and urban planning. The rationale for the study relates to the
role of airports in the relationship between the flow of goods and urban development,
drawing from the field of transport geography and developing new knowledge related
to logistics in the planning. The impact of increased movements of people and goods
by air is expressed in emerging airport related urban forms. Despite contested claims
that airports are generators of regional economic growth, there a number of negative
impacts resulting from the growth around airports. The literature points to
sustainability concerns and externalities of airports, questioning the role of planning
to act in the public interest
The objectives of this study are firstly concerned with relationships between
transportation infrastructure and urban development, specifically in the context where
the state is pursuing an infrastructure led development path. Secondly, the
relationships between airports and logistics are explored in order to understand how
airports interact with the multi-scalar movement of specific goods; thirdly, the
interaction between airports with ports, roads and rail infrastructures; and fourthly how
airports relate to spaces of production and distribution within the context of the case
study in order to propose a normative framework for the planning of airports and
logistics. The case study of Dube TradePort development, incorporating the King
Shaka International Airport, is approached from within a constructivist paradigm,
while acknowledging the subjective nature of truth, and the concomitant fact that the
role of multiple perspectives and sources of information are necessary to such a study.
The qualitative case study is both the object of inquiry, bounded to the Dube TradePort
site, as well as the study design, used to explore how the movement of goods through
a purpose-built cargo terminal integrates with land use. Integration between modes of
transport improve the overall cost and efficiency of moving goods and improved
integration between transportation and land use planning, which has implications for
overall efficiency of the urban economy.
The study contributes to the body of knowledge emerging from a developmental
context on how planning for airport and logistics provides a critical reflection on the
practice of airports and logistics for the field of urban planning. It is recommended
that a regional spatial development framework process is initiated within a normative framework of spatial transformation. The study points towards substantive issues for
inclusion in plan-making processes related to how positionality in airfreight flows is
important to understand the multimodal and multi-scalar connectivity between air
transport, with road, rail and sea-based modalities and secondly to understand how
planning for airports can be integrated with planning for productive land uses within
the city structure. The implication being that the plan-making process requires a
layered approach that considers horizontal integration in local economies and multiscalar approach to integrating with global economies in terms of investment flows and
material flows.
Description
Submitted for the requirements of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
Public Management, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2020.
Keywords
Regional economic activity, Dube TradePort development, Transportation services
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4391