by Leanan » Tue 24 Jan 2006, 16:17:51
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')You might as well do away with high street chains and out of town shopping, put it all in big warehouse somewhere (catalogue shop style) and ship it out via electric vans doing several drops at once.
Actually, that may happen. But that's not online shopping as we know it. Indeed, it's more like the old-fashioned hub systems, where factories and warehouses were built around rivers, canals, and railroads.
Online shopping has fundamentally changed the pattern of transportation in the U.S., and not for the better. Instead of trucks carrying goods from ports and factories to warehouses, then to central distribution points like Main Streets or malls, we have eBay and Amazon sending goods door-to-door. So heavy trucks are traveling residential streets, which is not only less fuel-efficient, it's rough on the roads, which weren't designed to carry that kind of traffic.
I think we may go back to the old Sears catalog model. They didn't deliver to your door. They'd deliver it to the train station, or some other central pickup point in town, and you had to go get it.
Even if you drove into town, that's still more fuel-efficient than a truck coming out to your place. And in the rural small towns that were Sears' bread and butter, your neighbors would often pick up your mail for you if they in town.