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Quelles places pour les activités logistiques dans la métropole parisienne ?

Author

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  • Nicolas Raimbault

    (IFSTTAR/AME/SPLOTT - Systèmes Productifs, Logistique, Organisation des Transports et Travail - IFSTTAR - Institut Français des Sciences et Technologies des Transports, de l'Aménagement et des Réseaux - Communauté Université Paris-Est)

  • Françoise Bahoken

    (IFSTTAR/AME/SPLOTT - Systèmes Productifs, Logistique, Organisation des Transports et Travail - IFSTTAR - Institut Français des Sciences et Technologies des Transports, de l'Aménagement et des Réseaux - Communauté Université Paris-Est)

Abstract

Warehouses and distribution centres are key-places for production systems. They are dedicated to the management of increasingly global and complex commodity chains which characterize "hyper-industrial" economies (Veltz, 2000). They are established in metropolitan regions predominantly, like Paris. In this urban region, what are the exact places of these logistics implantations? What information does this geography depict about the logics of these establishment processes: between firms' choices, urban projects and metropolitan fragmentation dynamics? This paper aims to reveal the territorial systems, between market, political and social regulations, which enable logistics activities to get places in metropolises. According to our statistical and cartographical approach, it appears that the building of warehouses entails to a peculiar suburbanization. It doesn't strictly follow urban fragmentation processes. Like industrial places, logistics places are often "[fiscally] wealthy municipalities populated by poor [inhabitants]." Several territorial systems seem to be at work: global dilutions of warehouses in urban areas; local concentrations of warehouses in municipalities which could be described as "servant territories" or in municipalities which are implementing economic development strategies based on hosting logistics activities or in places developed by State agencies. Thus, the local governance logics which explain these logistics places histories seem to balance between relegation and domination (of public territorial agents by logistics private or public agents) logics and voluntary and local projects of logistics developments. Eventually, there seems to be a certain metropolitan indifference vis-à-vis these places managing commodity flows. In this way the regulation of these activities is left to local mechanisms, scarcely propitious for the construction of this question as political stakes, public issues.

Suggested Citation

  • Nicolas Raimbault & Françoise Bahoken, 2014. "Quelles places pour les activités logistiques dans la métropole parisienne ?," Post-Print hal-01073057, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:hal-01073057
    Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://hal.science/hal-01073057
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Bowen, John T., 2008. "Moving places: the geography of warehousing in the US," Journal of Transport Geography, Elsevier, vol. 16(6), pages 379-387.
    2. Debrie, Jean & Lavaud-Letilleul, Valérie & Parola, Francesco, 2013. "Shaping port governance: the territorial trajectories of reform," Journal of Transport Geography, Elsevier, vol. 27(C), pages 56-65.
    3. Gordon MacLeod, 2011. "Urban Politics Reconsidered," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 48(12), pages 2629-2660, September.
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    Cited by:

    1. Adeline Heitz & Adrien Beziat, 2015. "The parcel industry in the spatial organization of logistics activities in the Paris Region: inherited spatial patterns and innovations in urban logistics systems," Post-Print hal-01738437, HAL.

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