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Multi-echelon Urban Distribution Networks

Author

Listed:
  • Imen Ben Mohamed

    (EM - EMLyon Business School)

  • Olivier Labarthe

    (Kedge BS - Kedge Business School)

  • Yann Bouchery

    (Kedge BS - Kedge Business School)

  • Walid Klibi

    (Kedge BS - Kedge Business School)

  • Gautier Stauffer

    (HEC Lausanne - Faculté des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC Lausanne))

Abstract

"This chapter presents two-echelon location and routing models and discusses their characteristics and solvability. It describes new paradigms in urban logistics and their challenges related to governance, green logistics, smart cities, and hyperconnected logistics. Designing distribution networks has critical impacts for city logistics stakeholders on cost, revenue and service levels to the city citizens. Using mathematical models to design the optimal distribution network is particularly constrained by the characterization of the operating environment and multiple factors such as demand, product portfolio, inventory levels, response time and returnability. The chapter focuses on the routing approaches dedicated to cargo bikes as this one is among the fastest-growing delivery modes in urban areas. A special emerging problem that challenges urban distribution and fits into the two-echelon setting is omnichannel retailing. The major challenge for cities and operators lies in the positioning of the transshipment and the resulting logistics organization: upstream for their supply, and downstream for delivery to customers."

Suggested Citation

  • Imen Ben Mohamed & Olivier Labarthe & Yann Bouchery & Walid Klibi & Gautier Stauffer, 2023. "Multi-echelon Urban Distribution Networks," Post-Print hal-04325703, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:hal-04325703
    as

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