TY - JOUR
T1 - Dark stores in the City of Light: Geographical and transportation impacts of ‘quick commerce’ in Paris
AU - Buldeo Rai, Heleen
AU - Mariquivoi, Joséphine
AU - Schorung, Matthieu
AU - Dablanc, Laetitia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/9
Y1 - 2023/9
N2 - Food e-commerce has long remained a limited phenomenon, which only changed noticeably during the COVID19 pandemic. Not only did more consumers take advantage of the options offered online, it also prompted the launch of many food delivery start-ups around the world. Quick commerce in particular, offering grocery deliveries within twenty minutes or less, attracted significant sums of venture capital, alongside criticism from urban administrations and communities for the nuisances caused. Indeed, to offer instant grocery deliveries, quick commerce companies rely on a tightknitnetwork of small, store-like warehouses, called ‘dark stores’, and a readily available vehicle fleet and staff. While plenty of ink has flowed about the urban implications of quick commerce in the press, a thorough scientific analysis lacks. To objectify and quantify the nuisances generated by quick commerce, we study geographical dimensions and transportation activities in Paris. By means of a press review, expert interviews, field observations and a cartography, we detail a supply chain consisting of various facility types; demonstrate the transportation-intensity of dark stores consisting mainly of electric two-wheelers; problematize the public space consumed by the vehicles in particular; and contrast the ultimately limited network of dark stores relative to traditional food retail.
AB - Food e-commerce has long remained a limited phenomenon, which only changed noticeably during the COVID19 pandemic. Not only did more consumers take advantage of the options offered online, it also prompted the launch of many food delivery start-ups around the world. Quick commerce in particular, offering grocery deliveries within twenty minutes or less, attracted significant sums of venture capital, alongside criticism from urban administrations and communities for the nuisances caused. Indeed, to offer instant grocery deliveries, quick commerce companies rely on a tightknitnetwork of small, store-like warehouses, called ‘dark stores’, and a readily available vehicle fleet and staff. While plenty of ink has flowed about the urban implications of quick commerce in the press, a thorough scientific analysis lacks. To objectify and quantify the nuisances generated by quick commerce, we study geographical dimensions and transportation activities in Paris. By means of a press review, expert interviews, field observations and a cartography, we detail a supply chain consisting of various facility types; demonstrate the transportation-intensity of dark stores consisting mainly of electric two-wheelers; problematize the public space consumed by the vehicles in particular; and contrast the ultimately limited network of dark stores relative to traditional food retail.
KW - E-commerce
KW - E-groceries
KW - Urban logistics
KW - Dark stores
KW - Omnichannel retail
KW - Urban planning
KW - Instant deliveries
KW - Proximity logistics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165040959&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.retrec.2023.101333
DO - 10.1016/j.retrec.2023.101333
M3 - Article
VL - 100
JO - Research in Transportation Economics
JF - Research in Transportation Economics
SN - 0739-8859
IS - 101333
M1 - 101333
ER -