The Chittenden (
Over the winter, the district had a contractor add four offices to its administration building, replace the roof and update the building’s interior. The project cost about $170,000.
According to the report, as an experiment, the district instructed the contractor to sort and recycle as much as possible. The contractor recycled about 23 percent of what would usually be thrown away, and he reported that other projects could yield a higher recycling rate. The large amount of discarded asphalt roofing shingles were difficult to recycle on the renovation project, according to the report.
According to the report, the contractor found no real cost difference in recycling.
Latest from Recycling Today
- Cards Recycling, Live Oak Environmental merge to form Ecowaste
- Indiana awards $500K in recycling grants
- Atlantic Alumina partners with US government on alumina, gallium production
- GP Recycling president retires
- Novelis Latchford commissions new bag houses
- UK facility focuses on magnet recycling
- Aduro revenue increases while losses widen
- Worldsteel updates its indirect steel data