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BOMA International. Foundations of Real Estate Management. Module 4: Building Operations II Solid Waste Management and Recycling. ®. Objectives. List the recyclable and non-recyclable items that make up the solid waste stream for a typical commercial building
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BOMA International Foundations of Real Estate Management Module 4: Building Operations II Solid Waste Management and Recycling ®
Objectives List the recyclable and non-recyclable items that make up the solid waste stream for a typical commercial building Explain the value of performing a waste audit Describe four primary types of waste removal containers Identify the benefits (financial, social, legal) of properly handling waste materials
The Waste Stream • Solid waste discarded by occupants = waste stream • Typical disposal methods • Landfill • Incineration • Waste-to-energy
The Waste Stream Solid waste comprised of • Office trash • Kitchen and organic materials • Composting is becoming more common • Medical waste • Usually handled separately • Hazardous Materials (HAZMAT) • Should never be in the waste stream
Recycling • Diverting materials from waste stream • Reduces weight and volume for disposal • Saves money • Often cost neutral • Reduces solid waste charges • Recycling is great – reducing materials before they enter the building is better • Reduce and reuse before recycling
Recycling • Purity of materials is important • Sorting methods • By users • Less costly • Less compliance from users • Co-mingling – sorting at a transfer station • More expensive • Better compliance from users
Recycling Recycling Made Easy • Remove trash cans • Place recycling containers at desk side • Place trash container in kitchen for items that cannot be recycled
Recycling • Office paper • White paper • Mixed paper • Newspaper • Cardboard • Baler • Recycling container (flatten the boxes!)
Recycling Cardboard recycling waste container Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Recycling Cardboard baler Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Recycling Glass, plastic, steel, and aluminum co-mingled Often co-mingled Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Recycling Fluorescent tubes and ballasts • Contain mercury • Should never go into waste stream! • Older ballasts contain mercury, PCBs, and other hazardous materials
Recycling Bulb crusher for fluorescent tube recycling. Tubes can also be repackaged without being crushed. Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Recycling Electronics equipment • PCs • Cell phones, PDAs, etc. • Copiers, faxes, printers
Recycling Electronics equipment stored on the loading dock for recycling Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Waste Audit Determine what is recycled v. discarded • No recyclables in waste stream • No waste in recyclable stream • Size, configuration, and schedule • Diversion rate = recyclables ÷ total waste
Improving Recycling Success • Educate tenants to recycle properly • Educate janitorial employees • Waste/recycling container selection • Change type of container or schedule to reduce cost
Waste Consultant Advantages • Reduce solid waste (volume and cost) • Improve recycling performance • Choose the right equipment • Negotiate better rates
Waste Management Containers • Front load • Rear load • Roll off • Compactor
Waste Management Front load container Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Waste Management Rear load container Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Waste Management Roll off container Photo courtesy of Transwestern
Waste Management Roll off container with compactor Photo courtesy of Transwestern
A Word About “Dumpsters®” The word “Dumpster®” is a trademark owned by the Dempster Brothers since 1930. Only waste containers manufactured by Dempster can be called “Dumpsters®.” Technically, if it is not a Dempster Dumpster®, it is just a trash container.