Overview
ABSTRACT
All developed and developing cities are looking for solutions to reduce congestion and pollution generated by urban distribution. The concept of the Urban Distribution Center has been presented as an effective solution. However, few cities have tested it and even fewer experiments have been conclusive. This article examines the concept and delineates its strengths and weaknesses, based on numerous examples, in France and elsewhere.
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Philippe BOSSIN: Chairman – Interface Transport, Lyon (France)
INTRODUCTION
M archandise in the city: an obligation to act.
Urban logistics, a component still poorly understood by local authorities, will nevertheless play a central role in local public policies.
On the one hand, because local authorities, in a context of densification of the urban fabric and multiple, competing uses, have not succeeded in curbing congestion, despite the retreat of the "all-car" approach.
Secondly, because local authorities are facing an environmental emergency that they are slow to address. The contribution of the goods vehicle fleet to pollutant emissions puts logistics activity at the heart of the debate on restricting access to the city.
Secondly, because city dwellers have become "consonauts", and the criticisms levelled at logistics (congestion, pollution, noise) are in reality simply the choice of the end customer, who wants home delivery in an ever-shorter timeframe. Added to this is the recent but fast-growing trend for private individuals to become shippers of goods by taking back purchases made on the Internet and selling second-hand items on networks such as E-Bay, Le Bon Coin...
In the absence of a genuine public policy on goods mobility, physical locations for delivery vehicles - in other words, traffic and parking management - and land allocated to logistics in city centers to handle goods, the urban distribution service will become untenable.
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KEYWORDS
logistic transportation | | Urban planning | urban distribution center
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Urban distribution centers: analysis and feedback
Bibliography
Websites
FNE – France Nature Environnement http://www.fne.asso.fr
IFSTTAR – Institut français des sciences et technologies des transports, de l'aménagement et des réseaux http://www.ifsttar.fr
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