This service outlet, known as Renault Trucks City, has all the features of a traditional Renault Trucks garage, with the big difference being that it will be located in the heart of the city. Opening this workshop is part of Renault Trucks’ strategy to ensure that it considers all aspects of the urban logistics ecosystem. The manufacturer is committed to being on hand at every stage of the logistics chain.
The Urban Logistics Hotel (ULH) in Lyon-Gerland, a logistics centre designed to manage the distribution of goods in the city, will open its doors at the end of March 2024 at Edouard Herriot port. The centre will act as a central hub, unlading and sorting goods, then rearranging them in low-emission vehicles, enabling low-carbon delivery tailored to urban constraints. The Lyon ULH will be home to a number of transport and logistics specialists, including Renault Trucks, which has built a new kind of service outlet there.
Last-mile operational support
Renault Trucks City will provide local maintenance and repair services for customers that operate medium-duty electric trucks and light commercial vehicles in Lyon’s city centre. This E-Tech-certified workshop, which is part of the Renault Trucks’ Corbas dealership, will be staffed by two technicians and has space to accommodate two trucks at a time. It also has an area dedicated to servicing Kleuster cargo bikes, assembled by Renault Trucks in Vénissieux.
If a vehicle requires a longer or more complex service, it will be taken to the Corbas workshop. Renault Trucks City in Lyon will also offer short- and medium-term vehicle rental services.
Renault Trucks, a partner at every stage of the supply chain
This initiative demonstrates Renault Trucks’ commitment to the Lyon metropolitan area’s transformation policy and to supporting its customers as closely as possible to their activities, so helping to increase their productivity.
This project reflects the manufacturer’s overall strategy, which aims to optimise all aspects of the urban logistics ecosystem by looking at is as a whole. This includes offering a wide range of electric vehicles and services suited to the constraints of urban distribution; encouraging modal transfer; experimenting with mobile and modular locker solutions; and optimising logistics patterns and loading-unloading systems.
A pilot project with scope for expansion
This initial experiment in France is a precursor to other similar initiatives for Renault Trucks, with projects under consideration in Paris, Marseille and in the Netherlands, where Renault Trucks distributor Bluekens recently opened an area dedicated to cargo bikes and last-mile services for hauliers.