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Decoding mobility hubs: Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society

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Decoding mobility hubs: Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society. / Nikitas, A.; Alyavina, E.; Sadik, C. et al.
In: Journal of Transport Geography, Vol. 127, 104296, 31.07.2025.

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Nikitas, A., Alyavina, E., Sadik, C., & Michalakopoulou, K. (2025). Decoding mobility hubs: Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society. Journal of Transport Geography, 127, Article 104296. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2025.104296

Vancouver

Nikitas A, Alyavina E, Sadik C, Michalakopoulou K. Decoding mobility hubs: Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society. Journal of Transport Geography. 2025 Jul 31;127:104296. Epub 2025 May 31. doi: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2025.104296

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Bibtex

@article{b9bc8aef0055452eb26fca6c1b3afc75,
title = "Decoding mobility hubs: Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society",
abstract = "In an era, where, on the one hand, climate change constitutes a planet-defining threat but, on the other, technology provides unprecedented opportunities for connectivity, sharing and intelligence in transport, mobility hubs have emerged as a potential cornerstone for less car-dominated societies. Still in their infancy as a brand, mobility hubs promise to be visible, accessible, and integration-enabling spaces, where public transit, shared mobility, micromobility and active travel modes co-exist harmoniously alongside infrastructure facilities like charging and sharing stations. Yet, there are still genuine question marks around their implementation, functionality, urban fit and use. Can mobility hubs create opportunities to address effectively transport and even wider societal challenges? Are there any risks or potential side-effects when adopting them? This paper attempts to provide answers by critically reviewing the existing literature and conducting a thematic narrative analysis, identifying and contextualising the opportunities and risks behind mobility hubs' introduction, adoption and travel behaviour impact. According to our research mobility hubs, if designed appropriately, can assume positive roles becoming: an opponent for private car, a solution for any geography, a MaaS companion, a place of social abundance and a supporter of wider economy. If they are not, though, mobility hubs may be instead responsible for: environmental burdens, public indifference, discomfort by default, abuse of space and inequity problems. Our work provides a genuine platform for decoding the potential of mobility hubs exploring the often-neglected grey sides of this shared transport phenomenon by focusing not only in new, niche, shared micromobility-centric investments but also looking at rebranded transit-based mechanisms. If these opportunities are seized and side-effects avoided, then there could be a powerful business case for mobility hubs we argue.",
author = "A. Nikitas and E. Alyavina and C. Sadik and K. Michalakopoulou",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2025.104296",
language = "English",
volume = "127",
journal = "Journal of Transport Geography",
issn = "0966-6923",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Decoding mobility hubs

T2 - Opportunities and risks underpinning their introduction for the contexts of transport and the wider society

AU - Nikitas, A.

AU - Alyavina, E.

AU - Sadik, C.

AU - Michalakopoulou, K.

PY - 2025/5/31

Y1 - 2025/5/31

N2 - In an era, where, on the one hand, climate change constitutes a planet-defining threat but, on the other, technology provides unprecedented opportunities for connectivity, sharing and intelligence in transport, mobility hubs have emerged as a potential cornerstone for less car-dominated societies. Still in their infancy as a brand, mobility hubs promise to be visible, accessible, and integration-enabling spaces, where public transit, shared mobility, micromobility and active travel modes co-exist harmoniously alongside infrastructure facilities like charging and sharing stations. Yet, there are still genuine question marks around their implementation, functionality, urban fit and use. Can mobility hubs create opportunities to address effectively transport and even wider societal challenges? Are there any risks or potential side-effects when adopting them? This paper attempts to provide answers by critically reviewing the existing literature and conducting a thematic narrative analysis, identifying and contextualising the opportunities and risks behind mobility hubs' introduction, adoption and travel behaviour impact. According to our research mobility hubs, if designed appropriately, can assume positive roles becoming: an opponent for private car, a solution for any geography, a MaaS companion, a place of social abundance and a supporter of wider economy. If they are not, though, mobility hubs may be instead responsible for: environmental burdens, public indifference, discomfort by default, abuse of space and inequity problems. Our work provides a genuine platform for decoding the potential of mobility hubs exploring the often-neglected grey sides of this shared transport phenomenon by focusing not only in new, niche, shared micromobility-centric investments but also looking at rebranded transit-based mechanisms. If these opportunities are seized and side-effects avoided, then there could be a powerful business case for mobility hubs we argue.

AB - In an era, where, on the one hand, climate change constitutes a planet-defining threat but, on the other, technology provides unprecedented opportunities for connectivity, sharing and intelligence in transport, mobility hubs have emerged as a potential cornerstone for less car-dominated societies. Still in their infancy as a brand, mobility hubs promise to be visible, accessible, and integration-enabling spaces, where public transit, shared mobility, micromobility and active travel modes co-exist harmoniously alongside infrastructure facilities like charging and sharing stations. Yet, there are still genuine question marks around their implementation, functionality, urban fit and use. Can mobility hubs create opportunities to address effectively transport and even wider societal challenges? Are there any risks or potential side-effects when adopting them? This paper attempts to provide answers by critically reviewing the existing literature and conducting a thematic narrative analysis, identifying and contextualising the opportunities and risks behind mobility hubs' introduction, adoption and travel behaviour impact. According to our research mobility hubs, if designed appropriately, can assume positive roles becoming: an opponent for private car, a solution for any geography, a MaaS companion, a place of social abundance and a supporter of wider economy. If they are not, though, mobility hubs may be instead responsible for: environmental burdens, public indifference, discomfort by default, abuse of space and inequity problems. Our work provides a genuine platform for decoding the potential of mobility hubs exploring the often-neglected grey sides of this shared transport phenomenon by focusing not only in new, niche, shared micromobility-centric investments but also looking at rebranded transit-based mechanisms. If these opportunities are seized and side-effects avoided, then there could be a powerful business case for mobility hubs we argue.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2025.104296

DO - 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2025.104296

M3 - Journal article

VL - 127

JO - Journal of Transport Geography

JF - Journal of Transport Geography

SN - 0966-6923

M1 - 104296

ER -