• Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    There should be zero delivery trucks clogging city streets. Zero.

    Good luck with that. And the bike-riding population will do all their shopping far outside the city, where shops still survive? A cargo bike is nice for personal shopping, for deliviering letters or small packets, but you won’t be able to fill the shelves of a supermarket this way. And whoever thinks about using freight trams for this, sit down and actually think this idea through for a change.

    • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Many smaller businesses could be served just fine with cargo bikes. And once every inch of free space is no longer clogged up by parking cars, it’ll be easy to assign loading zones for bigger vehicles that supply supermarkets and the like. Now make those electric and everything becomes much quieter and less polluted. Then people will actually enjoy coming to the city centre again so business there can thrive.

    • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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      4 months ago

      Sure, if you focus on the “zero” part of the phrase you can score a cheap point. Now focus on the “trucks” and the “clogging” part. A van can stock up a small to medium store just fine, and a walkable neighborhood doesn’t need big box stores to begin with (and small business ownership is a plus for economic conservatives too). And with fewer cars carting individuals around, delivery vans can move in and out much more efficiently without clogging up anything.

    • theneverfox@pawb.social
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      4 months ago

      It’s not exactly some unsolvable logic puzzle. This is a problem not everywhere has, it’s pretty simple.

      Two solutions.

      First, you create a second way in. It can be anything from dedicated streets for cargo with all the loading docks to shared warehouses at the edge of the city and underground tunnels like Disney. The main idea is to dedicate most streets to people and bikes, which can have all the storefronts

      Or the easy way we could do far more quickly… Instead of slicing space you slice time. Limit deliveries from 4am to 7am, maybe an afternoon slot if necessary. The idea being people get the prime time, and you work out the logistics with that constraint

      For better logistics, limit the size of the trucks and do shared distribution centers as a buffer for normal shipping times.

      Ideally, you do #2 while transitioning to #1. Put a slowly increasing off hour delivery tax and create an incentive. The logistics will magically come together as the tax grows

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Limit deliveries from 4am to 7am

        Oh boy I sure do love being woken up at 5am because the loud-ass delivery truck is restocking the grocery store.

        • theneverfox@pawb.social
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          4 months ago

          I don’t know what it’s like where you live, but I do sometimes get woken up by the garbage truck. Not often, but it’s loud as shit and comes just before 5am… IDK if it’s bad luck, but everywhere I’ve ever lived seems to have garbage trucks that came well before sunrise, and they’re about the loudest trucks before you get up to construction vehicles

          Unloading a truck isn’t even on the same volume scale. Especially if we used small trucks from a distribution center outside the city. Other countries do it, and we do it already, just not in the same numbers I’m proposing

          This doesn’t sound like an actual issue to me

    • Ithral@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 months ago

      So, why do we need a supermarket? Is there any reason a supermarket couldn’t be replaced with it’s contingent parts? A butcher, a veggie shop, a convenience food shop, a pharmacy, a bakery, and a condiments shop?

      I don’t see why they have to be stapled together when separate works just fine. All of which could fairly practically be stocked individually by small light duty trucks, or even a bike with a decently sized trailer.

      I also don’t see why even if you staple everything together, a cargo tram wouldn’t work. Have two, a passenger tram that works one route, and a cargo line that runs by the loading bays of local stores. They can be switched on and off the overarching infrastructure without interfering with each other.

      It would be a paradigm shift for the US, but I fail to see how it would be an unworkable one.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Is there any reason a supermarket couldn’t be replaced with it’s contingent parts?

        Mainly just economics. Supermarkets tend to have cheaper prices, and it’s probably a result of consolidating the operations to share resources (loading docks, refrigeration, payroll, etc)

        • magiccupcake@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Supermarkets should have cheaper prices, but now that they have formed a monopoly of just a few companies they are not.

          Small shops keep supermarkets competitive, without them they become monopolistic.

          • Drusas@kbin.run
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            4 months ago

            That’s not what I see here in Seattle. Yes, the supermarkets are monopolistic, but they are still significantly less expensive than going to a butcher, a baker, etc.

            • magiccupcake@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              It’s mostly an issue in rural and suburban areas. The grocery store closest to me feels like it’s price gouging (Safeway) , and I try and go to other grocery stores for bigger trips like Wegmans or H-Mart.

              Meat is especially bad, like $10/lb for ground chicken bad. Meanwhile at H-Mart it’s $3/lb.

      • Neato@ttrpg.network
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        4 months ago

        How do you think any of those are getting goods? If you ban trucks you’ll just get cargo vans and then lots of smaller cars. Or they’ll go out of business and people will complain you can’t live in the city and move to suburbia. Again.

    • RagingHungryPanda@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      If I had a dime for every time somebody made this reply, I’d have a lot of dimes.

      Nobody has ever said that. What people are saying is that the private automobile is the worst way to move masses of people in cities. They command ungodly amounts of space, make everything more expensive thereby, and aren’t even good at moving masses of people.

      You want to increase the capacity of your road? You can:

      • spend millions adding lanes and possibly destroying houses
      • turn a lane into a dedicated bus lane
      • turn a lane into a bike lane
      • hell, pedestrian areas have higher people capacities than car lanes
      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Yes, you are right. You are talking of moving people inside cities. I am talking about a) getting in and out of the city and b) moving goods into and out of cities. None of the usual demands in this group ever even starts to address this.

        • biddy@feddit.nl
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          4 months ago

          Yes, of course delivery trucks need access to cities, some goods are not practical to move by cargo bike. As do emergency services and buses. Nobody disagrees with this. The problem in many cities is that streets are clogged with useless private cars. So the obvious solution is to ban private cars.

            • biddy@feddit.nl
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              4 months ago

              Private cars in general are not useless, but private cars in the center of cities should be useless if the city is designed well. The space-transportation trade off does not make sense.

        • ebc@lemmy.ca
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          4 months ago

          What usually works better for moving people in and out of cities is park-n-ride setups where you setup a giant parking lot in the suburbs next to a metro station. People can just ditch their car outside the city and proceed using public transit. I often do this in Montreal, for example.

          For goods, it’s a similar setup but with big trucks transferring cargo to smaller trucks; this is already pretty common.

          • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            Just use busses and trams

            And once people use bikes all over and you can get rid of the 10.000 parking spots, you can build much more local small shops. Nobody loves going to Walmart and nobody will if there are small local shops around the corner where you can simply walk to

            • ebc@lemmy.ca
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              4 months ago

              Bikes ain’t gonna work for people coming from far outside the city. I’m not talking about commuting distance, I’m talking about people who live in rural areas 2+ hours away from a city that need to come in occasionally. Having them make the whole trip by car necessitates maintaining car infrastructure in the city center, which will soon be co-opted by suburbanites. This use-case needs a bi-modal strategy.

              • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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                1 month ago

                You think that doesn’t happen in the Netherlands? It’s called public transportation. Trains, busses, trams, metro. People take their bikes onboard if they have to, get into the city, cycle the last little bit, and it’s done

                Also, if you gotta commute 2 hours you need a different job

                • ebc@lemmy.ca
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                  1 month ago

                  I’m not talking about commutes, I’m talking about going to the city for an appointment/shopping/conference/concert/sightseeing/etc.

                  But yeah, cycling the last mile works in the Netherlands between cities or suburbs because they are relatively well served by inter-city transit, but what about places like this random dairy farm . Can this guy just take his bike to downtown Amsterdam?

                  • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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                    1 month ago

                    No, but should be able to take a bus. Even so, let him use a car I don’t mind, that’s what they’re for. Long distance transit, heavy hauling. The problem is with 95+% of the trips that are 4 miles and under where people drive their enormous pick-up trucks all empty. You can do those by bike.

                    Edit:

                    Just an example of what happens when you start reworked more and more car cities into people cities. You can still get there by car, it’s just that public transport and bike and walking is easier so why wouldn’t you