To clarify, the pod is a new form of single traveler sleeper accomodation, called a couchette that OBB (Austria's) Nightjet is planing for a new equipment order. Various views of the proposed rooms are here.
The drop-off portion is just the setout of a complete occupied car on a station track, where 15-30 passengers could have customized, comfortable route plan, which used to be common until the mid-60's. This would be a way to get the most high-dollar revenue possible as actual intercity travel is pretty thin between most origin-destination city pairs.
Don't know the in's and out's of it. Just familiar with Hoeksema. A friend of my wife was his admin asst. for many years. Midwest started as Kimberly Clark's airline based in Appleton. Used to ferry KC people to their locations in Atlanta and elsewhere. Gradually expanded, was split from KC, moved most operations to MKE. I figure he knows the arena very well.
Your idea of drop-off and on passenger pods is intriguing.
Good luck to this operator trying 8-seat business jets (also likely with $8000/hour block time costs) in an airline model, but I have seen several EAS operators in the last five years of cheaper fuel beg to get out of federal subsidy contracts early even when flying older RJs that seat 50 passengers. Once the RJ airframes hit the next cycle they will not be renewed in large number, making the connection timings worse through hubs.
Without a doubt a renewed single night out rail network is a complement to a daytime service, but it is certainly justifiable as true transportation, and would seem to serve the needs of travelers on intermediate distance intercity trips.
Unfortunately or not, the "hole in the market" you describe is beginning to be filled with "new" flights; I suppose with less capital required than by rail.
https://www.jsonline.com/story/money/2017/10/03/onejet-plans-operating-base-mitchell-international-airport/712884001/
Great post, V. Payne, too bad so many of the ROW in/out of cities have been torn out and others now so narrowed and boxed as to make expansion near impossible. Also unfortunate is the attitude of freight railroad ownership/management toward innovative co existense with passenger operations. The heavy, long super freights running on "pipeline" systems of rail may not have a future as 3 D printing cuts into the massive shipments of goods worldwide. Granted, that is in the future but most other leading nations tend to think and plan for truly long term situations.
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