Site and Situation
The concepts of site and situation can be articulated over two core dimensions:
- The site is mostly related to the attributes of a location, which mainly fall within physical, infrastructure, and economic characteristics. They are usually amenities that make a location attractive to specific activities (e.g. commercial, residential, manufacturing). Transport terminals require a suitable site, such as good maritime access for a port or flat land in reasonable proximity to a metropolitan area for an airport.
- The situation is related to the relationships with other locations at the local, regional or global scale. It reflects the connectivity of a location to other locations. The situation is relative to the characteristics of other locations, which can place a location at an advantage or a disadvantage. For instance, the situational value of a location could be related to a natural resource in demand by other locations. For transport terminals, the situational value is derived from the importance of the other terminals they are connected to.
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The Geography of Transport Systems
SIXTH EDITION
Jean-Paul Rodrigue (2024), New York: Routledge, 402 pages. ISBN 9781032380407
Table of Contents
- 1. Transportation & Geography
- 2. Transportation & Spatial Structure
- 3. Transportation, Economy & Society
- 4. Transport, Energy & Environment
- 5. Transportation Modes
- 6. Transportation Terminals
- 7. Trade, Logistics & Freight Distribution
- 8. Urban Transportation
- 9. Transport Planning & Policy
- 10. Challenges for Transport Geography
- A. Methods in Transport Geography
- B. Applications & Case Studies
- C. City Logistics
Conditions
This material (including graphics) can freely be used for educational purposes, such as classroom presentations in universities and colleges. Any other uses, such as conference presentations, commercial training programs, news web sites or consulting reports, are FORBIDDEN. The material cannot be copied or redistributed in ANY FORM and on ANY MEDIA. For specific uses permission MUST be requested.
Editor
Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Professor of Maritime Business Administration at Texas A&M University - Galveston. His research interests cover transportation and economics as they relate to logistics and global freight distribution. Specific topics include maritime transport systems, global supply chains, gateways and transport corridors.
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