Abstract
This paper reviews the development of greenways/car-free trails as an alternative environmentally friendly communication system and assesses their strengths and weaknesses. It gives the results of a questionnaire survey of 1261 users along a 106-km greenway in Spain linking the Pyrenees with the Mediterranean Sea. Unlike previous studies, sampling was random and unequal probabilities of selection were properly accounted for. The results show a complex range of user profiles, tourist and non-tourist, their perceptions of the trail and some of the direct and indirect impacts of the greenway on the communities through which it passes. Management recommendations flowing from the survey are presented with the aim of increasing the use of accommodation services and businesses in the towns and villages near the greenway and helping create a more sustainable tourism system. The paper illustrates the potential importance of greenways in a future low-carbon tourism strategy adapting to climate change.
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgements are due to the Girona Greenways Consortium and the Catalonia Employment Service (Servei d’Ocupació de Catalunya or SOC), which forms part of the Autonomous Government of Catalonia's Labour Department, for sponsoring data collection; to Bernard Lane for his useful comments and additions to the paper, and to three undergraduate tourism students who worked on this project as part of their degree theses, Maria Jesús Martínez Jiménez, Sandra Isern Ruiz and Laura Ruiz Benavides.