In the Media
July 16, 2021 //
Frontier Metropolitan Planning Organization, the regional transportation planning organization for the Fort Smith area, was selected by the Urban Freight Lab as the recipient of a grant for services for the study. The city was chosen as a subject to determine whether micro-freight hubs could work outside of large metropolitan areas.
July 12, 2021 //
The Urban Freight Lab, an initiative of the UW’s Supply Chain Transportation and Logistics Center (SCTL Center), has launched a pilot microhub to make carbon-reduced deliveries around the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle. The hub will be home to a number of electric vehicles, cargo bikes, and a “ghost kitchen”.
June 24, 2021 //
The Urban Freight Lab has launched one of the nation’s first zero-emissions delivery pilots that focuses on the “last-mile” — when parcels are moved from a transportation hub to a final destination.
June 23, 2021 //
The Urban Freight Lab launched one of the nation's first zero operating emissions, last-mile delivery pilots in the Uptown neighborhood of Seattle, in collaboration with the Seattle Department of Transportation and tech and delivery companies AxleHire, Coaster Cycles, BrightDrop and REEF.
June 23, 2021 //
John Halpin's guest for this episode is Dr. Anne Goodchild, founding director of the Supply Chain Transportation and Logistics Center at the University of Washington.
June 21, 2021 //
A recent report by the University of Washington Supply Chain Transportation & Logistics Center estimated that 25-50% of transportation supply chain costs are driven by the last phase of delivery, or the “final 50 feet”.
June 21, 2021 //
BrightDrop, a new business from Detroit’s General Motors Co., has partnered with the University of Washington Urban Freight Lab, the Seattle Department of Transportation, REEF, Coaster Cycles, and AxleHire to launch a zero-emission last-mile delivery pilot in Seattle’s Uptown neighborhood.
June 21, 2021 //
Anne Goodchild: “We could have a delivery system that is compatible with the way we want our communities to look, and feel, and sound, and run.”
BrightDrop Joins Urban Freight Lab, Startups to Launch Sustainable Last-mile Delivery Hub in Seattle
June 21, 2021 //
The delivery hub in Seattle’s Uptown neighborhood is a pilot program using zero operating-emissions technology to test new vehicles, delivery models and other technologies to help accelerate the development and deployment of sustainable last-mile solutions.
June 21, 2021 //
The pilot, slated to run through midsummer, is taking place in Seattle’s Uptown neighborhood. Located between Elliott Bay and Lake Union, Uptown is home to the Space Needle. Anne Goodchild, founding director of the Supply Chain Transportation and Logistics Center, noted the area is highly constrained due to “hills and water all around."
June 20, 2021 //
The delivery hub in Seattle’s Uptown neighborhood is a pilot program using zero operating-emissions technology to test new vehicles, delivery models and other technologies to help accelerate the development and deployment of sustainable last-mile solutions.
June 18, 2021 //
Using zero operating emissions technologies, the Seattle Neighbourhood Delivery Hub allows last-mile solutions providers to more quickly and efficiently test new vehicles and models.
June 18, 2021 //
The proposal “is totally doable” from an engineering perspective, said Anne Goodchild, founding director of the Supply Chain Transportation & Logistics Center at the University of Washington.
June 18, 2021 //
By Fleet Forward StaffBrightDrop has collaborated with the University of Washington’s Urban Freight Lab, the City of Seattle, and tech and delivery companies AxleHire, Coaster Cycles, and REEF, a delivery kitchen, to launch one of the nation’s first zero operating-emissions, last-mile neighborhood delivery hubs, they announced in a news release.