By Maria Kalamatas | May 12, 2025
Seoul, SOUTH KOREA
In Seoul, you can walk down a narrow street in the early evening and notice something curious. A quiet cart rolls by on small wheels. It stops, pauses at a door, and keeps going. No sound. No driver.
This is not a test. It’s how things work now.
South Korea has spent the last two years designing a logistics model that doesn’t aim to impress—it simply works. In 2025, Seoul has taken the lead in connecting neighborhoods with small, local delivery tools. The change didn’t start with robots. It started with space.
“Cities aren’t made for trucks,” says Ji-Hoon Park, who works on last-mile planning at the Ministry of Transport. “We needed a system that fits where people live.”
The project began in low-rise districts where narrow streets made delivery difficult. Small electric carts replaced vans. Packages were stored in basement rooms, then picked up by carriers who followed walking routes, not roads.
Over time, software came in. Routes were suggested, then adjusted based on weather and foot traffic. Larger buildings began adding small storage rooms near entrances, shared by all tenants. Couriers no longer waited in lobbies. They dropped off and moved on.
Park says the goal wasn’t speed. It was consistency.
“You don’t need delivery in 15 minutes,” he explains. “You need it when it’s expected. Without noise. Without stress.”
Major companies joined in. Logistics firms tested new software to handle flow. Retailers partnered with housing associations. People started noticing the difference—not on apps, but in everyday life.
“Before, I’d hear vans and scooters all evening,” says Jin-Woo Kim, who lives in Dongdaemun. “Now I get a message. The package is there. That’s it.”
Seoul’s approach isn’t flashy. It doesn’t make headlines for flying drones or giant robots. It shows that logistics innovation can be quiet, shared, and human-sized.
And that might be exactly what cities need right now.