Moving Millions: Transport Infrastructure and the Rise of Global Tourism
MTA
Airports, rails, and roads that enable modern tourism flows and destination access
2nd Edition
*Moving Millions* explores the critical symbiosis between transport infrastructure and the global tourism industry, arguing that destination competitiveness is a direct outcome of network design and policy rather than organic demand. The book traces the evolution of travel from the steam age to the jet era, detailing how major gateways like airports and cruise ports serve as first-impression ecosystems that dictate visitor flow. It contrasts legacy and low-cost carrier models, explains the impact of "Open Skies" liberalization, and introduces the "three-hour rule," which positions high-speed rail as a dominant competitor to short-haul aviation. Beyond major hubs, the text examines the "long tail" of access provided by roads, coaches, cableways in rugged terrains, and the increasingly vital "last-mile" solutions like micromobility and ride-hailing.
The narrative places a heavy emphasis on the operational and digital integration required for modern mobility. Chapters on intermodal hubs and "Mobility-as-a-Service" (MaaS) demonstrate how seamless ticketing, real-time data, and intuitive wayfinding are essential for managing urban crowds and enhancing the visitor experience. The book also addresses the governance of these complex systems, highlighting the need for coordination between often-siloed tourism and transport agencies. By utilizing digital infrastructure, destinations can employ demand-side management to disperse tourists, reduce bottlenecks, and maintain local quality of life.
A central theme is the urgent transition toward sustainability and resilience. The author examines the environmental externalities of transport—including carbon emissions, noise, and habitat fragmentation—and proposes pathways to net-zero through sustainable aviation fuels, electrification, and deliberate modal shifts. It advocates for rigorous Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) and Environmental and Social Impact Assessments (ESIA) that internalize the social costs of carbon and overtourism. Furthermore, the book addresses risk management, noting that infrastructure must be designed to withstand shocks from pandemics, natural disasters, and geopolitical volatility through redundancy and design hardening.
Ultimately, the book serves as a strategic playbook for destination managers and investors, culminating in the concept of the Integrated Mobility Plan (IMP). This framework emphasizes that inclusivity and equity—designing for the disabled, the elderly, and the local workforce—are not just moral imperatives but essential for maximizing a destination’s addressable market. By aligning financial mechanisms like value capture and user charges with strategic digital governance, *Moving Millions* provides a roadmap for creating transport networks that are financially viable, environmentally responsible, and capable of supporting the sustained, inclusive growth of global tourism.
This book is essential for tourism planners, destination managers, transport infrastructure policymakers, and investors working at the intersection of tourism and mobility. It provides actionable insights for professionals responsible for designing, funding, or managing visitor transportation systems who need to balance economic growth with sustainability, equity, and resilience. Government officials, airport and rail authorities, and tourism development organizations will find particular value in the strategic playbooks and integrated mobility planning frameworks.
February 2, 2026
42,406 words
2 hours 58 minutes
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