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Details for De Neufville, R. (2005) Multi – Airport systems; In the era of no – frills Airlines
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NameDe Neufville, R. (2005) Multi – Airport systems; In the era of no – frills Airlines
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De Neufville, R. (2005) Multi – Airport systems; In the era of no – frills Airlines, DRAFT No-Frills paper, ESD-WP-2005-06, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, June 2005

http://esd.mit.edu/wps/esd-wp-2005-06.pdf. Accessed May 12, 2010



The development of no-frills airlines is promoting a remarkable expansion in the number of secondary airports in major metropolitan areas. These new carriers are creating a significant alternative to the traditional full-service carriers. In effect, they are establishing a parallel market and corresponding network of airports. This conclusion results from the analysis of a world-wide database on major metropolitan airports. This effect supplements the "number of originating passengers", that has been the traditional significant factor that promotes the establishment of viable multi-airport systems. This factor maintains its importance, but no longer is as decisive as it has been. Airlines and airport policies further reinforce the independent network of secondary airports. Nofrills airlines that sell only through the web to customers effectively cause their services at secondary airports to disappear from the airline reservation systems. Airports that choose not to provide low-cost service to no-frills airlines likewise strengthen the role of the secondary airports. Such strategies, most visible in Europe, have led to a remarkable proliferation of secondary airports in unexpected areas. This trend implies a traffic shift away from the expensive, congested airports toward the no-frills, inexpensive and no congested airports in major metropolitan areas. If the current major airlines do shrink substantially, as could happen, this would greatly change the pattern of airport traffic in major metropolitan areas.
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Created On: 12/12/2007 15:48
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