Tiree travellers invited to tell their experiences

Want to read more?

We value our content and access to our full site is only available with a  subscription. Your subscription entitles you to 7-day-a-week access to our website, plus a full digital copy of that week’s paper to read on your pc/mac or mobile device.  In addition, your subscription includes access to digital archive copies from 2006 onwards.

Just want to read one issue? No problem you can subscribe for just one week (or longer if you wish).

Already a subscriber?

 

Problems logging in and require
technical support? Click here
Subscribe Now

konstantinosbusresearchA postgraduate student from the University of Aberdeen ghas travelled to Tiree this week as a part of his research project which aims to help rural and remote communities cope better when vital transport links are disrupted.

Researcher Konstantinos Papangelis arrived on Tiree on  Thursday, October 25 2012  and is staying through next week to see firsthand the transport issues for the local community and to gather the experiences and views of people living on this most westerly island of the Inner Hebrides.

There will be several opportunities for island residents to meet Konstantinos and give him their own personal stories over a cup of tea or coffee. He will be at the Rural Centre Cafe on the island from 10am to 12 noon on Friday 26, Saturday 27 and Sunday 28 October.

Konstantinos will also be attending the TechWave event from 25-29 October at the Tiree Rural Centre, which is a hands-on making-and-meeting event exploring the edges of technology on the wild edge of Scotland.

Konstantinos said:  “I’m interested in hearing people’s personal stories about travelling when there are disruptions, for example if they have found themselves stranded on the mainland, or on the island.

“I want to hear how people living in a relatively remote area such as Tiree make choices about transport to get around during a period of disruption for whatever reason. I’m also keen to hear what information would be most useful to help them make their decisions.

“People’s real-life experiences will help me in my project to design, with my colleagues, solutions that would use technology like mobile phones to help people decide if, how and when to travel when disruptions are happening or forecast.”

Konstantinos, who hails from Greece, was awarded a postgraduate scholarship from the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport to support the costs of his fieldwork – which is part of a project called Informed Rural Passenger (IRP).

He has already spent weeks interviewing local people in the Scottish Borders, organised focus groups in various areas of urban and rural England and Scotland, and travelled widely through Europe to gather views and experiences in our European neighbours.

For more news from the West Highlands and islands see The Oban Times, every Thursday, also on line at www.obantimes.co.uk/digital