- Identification of challenges and opportunities on airport accessibility through a comprehensive process that includes a spatial analysis of the accessibility of different airports across the Europe; a desk research covering academic papers and industrial reports on the analysis of the accessibility of different European airports and the identification of preliminary opportunities and challenges for airport accessibility; and a stakeholder involvement process, based on the results of the spatial analysis and the desk research, aimed to develop MAIA’s conceptual framework.
- Development and validation of MAIA-Engine, a toolset for a passenger-centric design and implementation of innovative multimodal airport access services, which is composed by four components that include new methods and tools for monitoring and predicting passenger behaviour
- Development and validation of MAIA-CCAM, a vehicle dispatching tool to support the operation of CCAM fleets in the airport access. The tool is based on an open-source agent-based transport simulation framework, and is capable of estimating several CCAM service indicators (e.g. number of vehicles needed to serve the daily airport demand, passenger waiting times, etc.) under different service configurations (stop locations, maximum promised wait times and detours for the passengers, etc.).
- Development and validation of MAIA-UAM, a vertiport site selection framework to support the implementation of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) services in the airport access. The tools is composed of two modules. One module focuses on the location of vertiports across the urban area, while the second module focuses on micro-location selection for the vertiport at the airport site.
- A demonstration of the capabilities of the MAIA solutions through their application to two case studies in Madrid Barajas and Brussels National airports. The application of MAIA-Engine demonstrated its capability to describe passenger demand accessing the airport, and to estimate the potential demand of UAM- and CCAM-based services. The MAIA-CCAM tool successfully assessed the impact of the application of CCAM services in both Madrid and Brussels. The tool demonstrated its utility to support CCAM operators to shape their service and to tailor it to the needs and references of the passengers, while ensuring an economic return that makes viable the operation of the services. Finally, the MAIA-UAM tool evaluated the potential location of vertiport both in urban areas and the airport site. The tool demonstrated its usefulness to support UAM operators to select the optimal location of the vertiports to maximise their profit, while maximising the demand captured.