The Human-Powered Last Mile – DHL Delivery Bike

In the future, all your packages, food, and possibly children will be delivered by an intelligent, perceptive, box-on-wheels or flying machine that will gently deposit your package upon your doorstep and then float away.

That is the dream, and there are literally dozens of companies developing solutions for the most complicated and uncontrolled portion of the delivery chain. By uncontrolled, I mean in contrast to the massive automated sorting and scanning operations occurring inside carefully designed and efficiency-optimized distribution warehouses, the actual process of getting the object to your door is confoundingly complex and varied. Gates, curbs, stairs, weather, doors and other impediments to placing an object on the threshold demand that customers have to come to the sidewalk to receive their delivery, negating much of the claimed convenience.

Yet it is taken for granted that the postman and postwoman drop packages to your door everyday.

All this is to say that humans are very adaptable to unknown and changing contexts and conditions, qualities that the computer mind does not have (machine learning is an attempt to address this). This makes them very well suited to the task of last-mile delivery. So why not refine and leverage the part of the delivery equation that already works and address the noisy, polluting and obstructive part of the problem in a way that produces less emissions and better health outcomes for the worker?

DHL’s last-mile delivery bike, along with similar efforts by UPS and DPD is the outcome of that line of thinking. Currently deployed in Europe, plans to rollout in NYC have been stymied by regulatory hurdles but are still in the works.

Combining the flexibility of a human deliverer in the loop with a vehicle that is safer for pedestrians and other road users, won’t block a lane of traffic at a stop, and improves the deliverer’s health is a GHG-reducing last mile delivery solution that can be implemented now.

Check out the gallery below and in a follow-on post I’ll get into the design details. These pics aren’t as well-composed or exposed as I’d like as they were taken in a dark exhibit hall near a bay door open to the very bright day outside at the FormulaE race in NYC.

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About Suhas Malghan

This blog documents the design and development of environmentally sustainable machines and humane design practice in general; machines that work for humanity as well on the move as they do sitting still.
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