This paper focuses on two-tier city logistics systems for advanced management of urban freight activities and, in particular, on the first layer of such systems where freight is moved from distribution centers on the outskirts of the city to satellite platforms by urban vehicles, from where it will be distributed to customers by a different fleet of dedicated vehicles. We address the issue of planning the services of this first tier system, that is, select services, their routes and schedules, and determine the itineraries of the customer-demand flows through these facilities and services. We propose a general scheduled service network design modelling framework that captures the fundamental concepts related to the definition of urban-vehicle tactical plans within a two-tier distribution network. We examine several operational assumptions regarding the management of the urban-vehicle fleet and the flexibility associated with the delivery of goods, and show how the proposed modelling framework can evolve to represent an increasing level of detail. A discussion of algorithmic perspectives completes the paper.

Service network design models for two-tier city logistics

Sgalambro A
2014

Abstract

This paper focuses on two-tier city logistics systems for advanced management of urban freight activities and, in particular, on the first layer of such systems where freight is moved from distribution centers on the outskirts of the city to satellite platforms by urban vehicles, from where it will be distributed to customers by a different fleet of dedicated vehicles. We address the issue of planning the services of this first tier system, that is, select services, their routes and schedules, and determine the itineraries of the customer-demand flows through these facilities and services. We propose a general scheduled service network design modelling framework that captures the fundamental concepts related to the definition of urban-vehicle tactical plans within a two-tier distribution network. We examine several operational assumptions regarding the management of the urban-vehicle fleet and the flexibility associated with the delivery of goods, and show how the proposed modelling framework can evolve to represent an increasing level of detail. A discussion of algorithmic perspectives completes the paper.
2014
Istituto Applicazioni del Calcolo ''Mauro Picone''
City logistics Scheduled service network design Urban freight transportation Fixed charge multicommodity network design Asset management
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/262246
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