Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa

This paper investigates the suitable location for an intermodal inland container terminal (IICT) in the city of Cape Town. A container market segmentation approach is used to project growth for container volumes over a 30-year period for all origin and destination pairings on a geographical district...

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Main Authors: Jan Havenga, David King, Zane Simpson, Leila Goedhals-Gerber, Anneke de Bod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2012-11-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Supply Chain Management
Online Access:https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/59
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spelling doaj-bb1969c0993f4e8ca49e04e8564e79592020-11-24T22:56:57ZengAOSISJournal of Transport and Supply Chain Management2310-87891995-52352012-11-016118019110.4102/jtscm.v6i1.5958Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South AfricaJan Havenga0David King1Zane Simpson2Leila Goedhals-Gerber3Anneke de Bod4Stellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch UniversityThis paper investigates the suitable location for an intermodal inland container terminal (IICT) in the city of Cape Town. A container market segmentation approach is used to project growth for container volumes over a 30-year period for all origin and destination pairings on a geographical district level in an identified catchment area. The segmentation guides the decision on what type of facility is necessary to fulfil capacity requirements in the catchment area and will be used to determine the maximum space requirements for a future IICT. Alternative sites are ranked from most suitable to least suitable using multi-criteria analysis, and preferred locations are identified. Currently, South Africa’s freight movement is dominated by the road sector. Heavy road congestion is thus prevalent at the Cape Town Container Terminal (CTCT). The paper proposes three possible alternative sites for an IICT that will focus on a hub-and-spoke system of transporting freight.https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/59
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Havenga
David King
Zane Simpson
Leila Goedhals-Gerber
Anneke de Bod
spellingShingle Jan Havenga
David King
Zane Simpson
Leila Goedhals-Gerber
Anneke de Bod
Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
Journal of Transport and Supply Chain Management
author_facet Jan Havenga
David King
Zane Simpson
Leila Goedhals-Gerber
Anneke de Bod
author_sort Jan Havenga
title Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
title_short Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
title_full Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
title_fullStr Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Container terminal spatial planning - A 2041 paradigm for the Western Cape Province in South Africa
title_sort container terminal spatial planning - a 2041 paradigm for the western cape province in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of Transport and Supply Chain Management
issn 2310-8789
1995-5235
publishDate 2012-11-01
description This paper investigates the suitable location for an intermodal inland container terminal (IICT) in the city of Cape Town. A container market segmentation approach is used to project growth for container volumes over a 30-year period for all origin and destination pairings on a geographical district level in an identified catchment area. The segmentation guides the decision on what type of facility is necessary to fulfil capacity requirements in the catchment area and will be used to determine the maximum space requirements for a future IICT. Alternative sites are ranked from most suitable to least suitable using multi-criteria analysis, and preferred locations are identified. Currently, South Africa’s freight movement is dominated by the road sector. Heavy road congestion is thus prevalent at the Cape Town Container Terminal (CTCT). The paper proposes three possible alternative sites for an IICT that will focus on a hub-and-spoke system of transporting freight.
url https://jtscm.co.za/index.php/jtscm/article/view/59
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