In 2002, the City of Johannesburg residents who drove to work spent about 27 million hours commuting, while those who used public transport spent about 82 million hours. Collectively, travel time to work translated into 62 000 work days per year. This is equivalent to 62 000 eight-hour daily jobs in a city that at the time had just over 520 000 employed residents (Gautrans 2002). The amount of time people spend travelling to work in the city, and travelling generally, is significant. Travel times have also been on the increase since the Gautrans survey that provided the 2002 figures. Considering that travel time is an overhead cost in terms of both time and money, the fundamental question that the city has to answer is: What can be done to reduce this overhead cost? Considering that any spatial change introduced in the city serves to either increase or reduce travel costs, careful consideration needs to be given to where, how and what these changes should be. In a globally significant city such as Johannesburg, increased transport costs also affect the economic competitiveness of South Africa. In this chapter we use historical information and data to investigate the effectiveness of transport service delivery in respect of managing transport costs in the city. Some of the most significant transport interventions in the last decade (e.g. the Rea Vaya Bus Rapid Transit [BRT] and Gautrain) are also reviewed. The chapter should be of interest to civil society activists, city administrators and academics. From a civil society perspective, awareness of the findings may encourage improved participation through critical questioning of the technocrat-led domain of transport planning. City administrators will appreciate the importance of a transport service delivery agenda that transcends the limited terms of political office bearers. Lastly, from an academic perspective, the chapter provides some quantitative baseline information that can be used in the systematic identification of additional research questions. While the geographical context in the chapter is limited to Johannesburg, most of the findings are equally relevant to any city in developing or mature economies.
Reference:
Mokonyama, .T.M and Mubiwa, B. Transport in the shaping of space. In: Changing space, Changing City. Johannesburg after Apartheid. WITS University Press: Johannesburg, South Africa
Mokonyama, M. T., & Mubiwa, B. (2014). Transport in the shaping of space., Workflow;13728 WITS University Press. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7822
Mokonyama, Mathetha T, and B Mubiwa. "Transport in the shaping of space" In WORKFLOW;13728, n.p.: WITS University Press. 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7822.
Mokonyama MT, Mubiwa B. Transport in the shaping of space.. Workflow;13728. [place unknown]: WITS University Press; 2014. [cited yyyy month dd]. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7822.