 
This paper discusses a shared mobility service that combines passenger 
and freight transport. Crowdshipping, in fact, implies delivering goods 
(freight) via the crowd (passengers). Any trip people perform to fulfil 
individual objectives can, in principle, be transformed shipping freight
 service too by using the free load capacity passengers have when moving
 from A to B. If widely developed this could provide a substantial 
contribution to reduce transport externalities by avoiding dedicated 
freight trips. This paper discusses both feasibility and behavioural 
issues with the intent of diffusing its deployment in urban areas. It 
does so by presenting some recent research advances related to the study
 of both demand (i.e. buyers) and supply (providers, i.e. crowdshippers)
 and discussing the main impacts this solution might have from an 
environmental and an economic point of view. In particular, it focuses 
on a particularly environmental-friendly crowdshipping service. The 
service considered assumes using a city mass transit network where 
customers/crowdshippers pick-up/drop-off goods via automated parcel 
lockers located either inside the transit stations or in their 
surroundings. Crowdshipping can play a crucial role in relieving cities 
from transport-related negative externalities by promoting the sharing 
economy and Physical Internet paradigm aiming for a shared, hyper 
connected, sustainable and efficient last-mile logistics.