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While
curbside collection of recyclables and greenwastes will
get you close to your diversion requirements, construction-and-demolition
waste materials are where the heavy tonnage exists.
By Lynn
Merrill
There can
be no question that the typical rolloff coming from
a construction site is a literal treasure trove of recyclable
commodities. Unlike a load of MSW, construction-and-demolition
(C&D) wastes are composed of materials that are
highly recyclable. But because of the nature of that
material, it tends to be heavy and bulky. It's
not something that would be run easily through the typical
material recovery facility (MRF).
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| The
Zanker Materials Processing Facility's overall view,
sorting trommel, and material recovery apparatus. |
According
to the Construction Materials Recycling Association
in Eola, IL, C&D makes up approximately 25%–45%
of the wastestream, and approximately 25% of the C&D
wastestream is recycled. A study for the EPA in 1996
by Franklin Associates estimated that 136 million tons
of building-related C&D debris were generated in
1996. Of this total, 58 million tons were generated
from residential sources and 78 million tons were generated
from non-residential sources. Demolition accounted for
48% of the C&D wastestream, while 44% of the wastestream
was due to renovations. Surprisingly, only 8% of the
wastestream is generated by new construction.
Woodwaste,
from framing, is the largest commodity generated at
construction and renovation sites. Concrete is the largest
material generated at demolition sites, resulting from
the removal of slabs, foundations, and walls during
teardown. Other materials found in quantities at either
demolition or construction sites include asphalt from
parking or road reconstructions, gypsum, or wallboard
from finish construction or demolition, and asphalt
shingles from roofing.
C&D waste,
much like curbside recyclables, has generated debate
over the effectiveness of single-stream versus source-separated
materials. While some programs separate material on
the job site, the trend in the C&D industry tends
to favor the "load it all in one bin and separate
it somewhere else" approach. For contractors at
the job site, training the various trades to take the
time to separate materials and to move these materials
to multiple locations for recycling adds time and cost.
Given that many of the trades are specialized subcontractors,
the challenge multiplies exponentially while the ability
to control the actions of the work force decreases,
making onsite recycling programs a challenge at best.
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Because of
these concerns, the trend in the industry is to develop
C&D processing facilities that can handle the volume
of materials while dealing with the dust, noise, and
processing issues associated with the material stream.
Think of today's C&D processing operations as a
MRF on steroids.
San Jose
Deposit Program
To encourage
the development of an active C&D diversion program,
the City of San Jose, CA, implemented the Construction
and Demolition Diversion Deposit (CDDD) program in 2001.
"We did a number of studies back in the late '90s
that led us to believe that there was a considerable
amount of C&D material ending up in our landfills
here," says Stephen Bantillo, C&D program
manager with San Jose's Environmental Services
Department. "In our strategic plan to council
we put implementation of some type of C&D recovery
as a high priority. We furthered our studies by doing
gate surveys to identify how the material was getting
there and those vehicles that were bringing loads there."
Using California's
beverage container recycling deposit program as a model,
the city began thinking of a similar program for C&D
materials, "the concept being that all the folks
here who recycle their material get all of their money
back, with the focus being on developing the infrastructure
and not so much the generators," Bantillo says.
"The contractors were the first group to tell
us that they weren't recyclers by trade. They're
in the business of tearing things down and building
things up. We knew there were too many issues with trying
to force them into recycling, and that's not what
we want to do anyway. We rely on an incentive-based
system for all of our programs, sort of an extension
of the pay-as-you-throw model. In this sense, we thought
what we can do is give them a financial incentive to
divert their C&D material."
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The program
involves three steps. When a contractor applies for
a project permit, the city assesses a deposit based
on the square footage and type of work, such as new
construction, alteration, or demolition. Then, during
the project, the C&D materials generated must be
recovered or recycled. The materials can either be reused
or donated, taken to a CDDD-certified facility for recovery
or recycling, or a combination of both strategies. Once
the project is completed, the contractor submits documentation
to the city showing that at least 50% of the waste generated
by the project was diverted from landfill disposal.
Developing
a viable and robust infrastructure to handle the C&D
materials became another priority for the city. "Our
focus was on coming up with an infrastructure that would
be able to handle the material," Bantillo says. "One
of the things we did after building support through
our stakeholder process was to offer up three-quarters
of a million dollars in C&D infrastructure grants.
We wanted to seed this system with some money so that
the processors knew that we were very serious about
moving forward with the program, and would begin to
see the value in enhancing their operations and increasing
the overall C&D processing capacity in town. We
have a number of facilities that are not in San Jose,
but we've certified them as well because they demonstrated
they can accept a significant amount of material from
San Jose. We gave out these grant funds over a period
of two years."
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| Morbark's
Predator. |
The facilities
are motivated to participate, Bantillo says, because
the city told them it would assess a deposit and issue
10,000 permits a year to contractors in need of a place
to take their debris. The city ended up with 22 certified
facilities that could handle C&D materials.
One facility
that received certification from the city is the Zanker
Road Landfill. Zanker owns and operates two waste-recycling
and -disposal facilities in San Jose. The Zanker Road
Landfill is a 46-acre facility and the Zanker Material
Processing Facility (MPF) is another 46-acre facility
located approximately 3,000 feet west of the landfill,
which opened in 1999. The landfill receives up to 1,300
tons of Class III waste daily, while the MPF can accept
up to 1,250 tpd.
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| Peterson's
4710 (top) and HC 74000 processing rail ties. |
According
to information provided by Michael Gross of Zanker,
most of the waste received at these facilities is mixed
C&D debris that comes from contractors or is hauled
to the site by contractors or residents. To process
the C&D materials, Zanker uses a screening system
and unique float tank designed by the company specifically
for separating wood from the rest. Mixed C&D is
first screened to recover soil from the waste and sorted
to remove large pieces of metal, wood, and trash. The
remaining mixed materials are then fed into a special
"float tank" where the wood is separated. The wet wood
is then combined with other recovered wood. The sinking
concrete, asphalt, bricks, mortar, metal, glass, and
soil are also recovered, separated, and then processed
further into usable materials.
Woodwastes
are the largest component of the incoming debris at
the Zanker facilities, making up 32% of the construction
stream and 50% of the demolition stream. Zanker also
accepts clean wood and brush loads, and separates wood
from incoming mixed loads, as well as processes bulky
wood items such as large stumps, limbs, and tree cuttings.
All of the recovered wood is ground and then screened
to meet market specifications. The finished wood products
are then sold as mulch, biomass fuel, and soil amendments.
Clean concrete, reinforced concrete, asphalt, bricks,
and porcelain are screened and crushed. Steel—including
rebar and other loose metals, wood, plastics, and trash—is
screened and separated before and during the crushing
processes. The finished material is a high-quality Class
II base rock. The base rock is sold mostly to construction
and paving contractors and used as Class II aggregate
or as engineered fill that meets California Department
of Transportation specifications. The company also produces
a variety of finished products, principally hog fuel,
cover soil, and base rock.
Williamson
County, TN
While the
San Jose programs discourage using processed C&D
materials for alternative daily cover (ADC), the C&D
program at Williamson County generates materials that
are used for various landfill programs, including erosion
control and vegetative purposes. "Williamson County
is a very high-income county," says Lewis Bumpus,
solid waste director for the county. "It's
served by a lot of retail, a lot of office, and a lot
of service-type businesses. There's very little
industry. We are very close to the music industry; in
fact, there's probably more music stars in this
county. Although Nashville is recognized as the music
city, Franklin is really the home of a lot of the music
people."
The county
operates a variety of solid waste transfer operations,
as well as a C&D waste landfill. "When I came
here, it had about five years' life," Bumpus
says. "I've been here six years and with
the program that we've set up, I'm hoping
to make it last about 40 years and will in C&D recycling.
Necessity is the mother of invention. The first thing
we did was a waste audit to study what all was coming
into the county so we'd know our wastestream and
some possible uses of it. We first started off with
woodwaste. I had 75 acres of cap we had to build out
here on the site and we took the mulch that we made
and we used it for vegetative cover. We just spread
it real thin over a lot of the acreage here."
After identifying
needed equipment, Bumpus sought a portable grinder that
could do C&D woodwaste. "We've used
several different pieces of equipment, but we ended
up buying the vertical grinder because it could be the
one machine that could handle all of our material. We
pull all the clean woodwaste out of the C&D. We
bought a star-type screen machine where we can change
different dials to make different sizes of mulch for
whatever your application. A lot of mulch is going to
be used for vegetative [purposes]. Thus far the large
jobs, state road projects and landfills, have taken
up all the material and I haven't had to develop
markets, but we have plans to serve some of the landscapers.
There's a lot of landscaping in this county."
Because of
the high content of clay in the native soils, Bumpus
had to develop a three-way screening machine that could
stand up to the clay while screening the C&D materials
for end uses. "We've got a machine that
was put together by several of us that … requires
no picking station and will work in Tennessee red clay,"
he says. "In the Northeast or West Coast, there's
a lot of C&D recycling that they used to trommel
but they have sand and sand works good in trommels.
Red clay doesn't work; it sticks to anything.
We took the frame of a rock crusher. It's a spring
system to keep the vibration from shaking the machine
apart. Then, secondly, it works on the same principle
as a combine in that it has finger decks that it shakes
and drops down to a lower deck. The major difference
is we put a tilt bed on it like you see on rock crushers
and some of your woodwaste machines. What it does is,
when you drop the material on that deck and flatten
it out, you don't have elongated pieces going
down through the fingers like a piece of rebar because
it's laying flat when it sifts over on it. We
pull out any metal that we see while we separate. The
material is flat and we run it through the screener
and, depending on the material, we get anywhere from
60% to almost 80% that comes out a 2-inch screen. Then,
we're getting about 20% that comes out the screen
that's about 6 inches to 2 inches. That material
will go into the grinder and be ground down. We try
getting all of the loose dirt out because dirt and silica
are terrible on grinders. They just wear them out all
to pieces."
Bumpus has
identified three markets for his materials. "I'm
trying to develop a market for vegetative and drainage
layer to cap landfills and that's the experiment
we're doing. We've got the approval on doing
the ADC, and I've got a contract in place on that
for the ADC. The third thing we're doing—and
again, we've only done this in pilot projects,
but it seems to work well—is reclaiming some of
the old construction and demolition sites by mining
it out."
Phoenix
C&D Recycling
In Des Moines,
IA, C&D material is heading to markets from the
mixed materials delivered to Phoenix C&D Recycling
Inc. "We receive around 300 tons a day and we
accept it commingled and process it into different markets,"
says Rob Hosier, senior vice president. "We pull
out wood and metal, cardboard, concrete, and we make
an alternative daily cover. That's our single
largest commodity. We find ourselves landfilling somewhere
between 10% to 15% residuals."
The company
uses a finger-screen and conveyor system that divides
the material in thirds, then each of the fractions goes
through a series of processes to an end product. "The
bottom third, which is a 2-inch-minus material, will
go all the way around the system and pass underneath
a magnet that pulls out all the ferrous metals,"
Hosier says. "The middles line, which would be
24-inch to 2-inch, passes underneath the magnet and
it pulls out the ferrous metals. It also goes across
the picking station, where we pick trash and wood. The
overs line, which is 24 inches up to 8 feet long, goes
across a picking station and we actually handpick all
those commodities, such as the metal. We don't
use a magnet at that fraction. After that there is a
concrete pick and then anything on that overs side that
we don't pick will actually go into a grinder
and it gets reduced into alternative daily cover. Typically,
we're going to grind all the bricks, all the block,
small pieces of concrete, wood, and some smaller pieces
of cardboard. The system will process up to 50 tons
an hour. After the grinder, it'll go to another
magnet to separate any additional ferrous metals and
then from there the material goes into a storage building.
On one side of the building is the alternative daily
cover, and it gets screened out with a star screen.
The overs, which is basically anything larger than 2
inches, will go to the other side, and then that's
a different product."
The company
sells the ADC to three local landfills, so it's
concerned with meeting the needs of these customers.
"We try to stay away from brush and trees,"
says Chris Reynolds, vice president of operations. "The
reason is, on our alternative daily cover, there's
a spec on it and we're trying to keep the organics
low. We don't process the tree limbs. Other than
that, they can go ahead and bring the carpet and the
gypsum, and what we'll do is we'll pull
that out. If it's large enough, we'll do
a kick sort where we pull it off on the front end and
that'll be landfilled. Most of our wood, however,
goes to a local company that supplies a furniture company
with particleboard wood."
Lynn Merrill
is director of public services for the City of San Bernardino,
CA.
MSW - January/February 2005
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