How to Set Up a Home Recycling System Louisville KY

Recycling helps cut domestic waste that would otherwise be buried in landfills and provides a steady supply of used materials that can be transformed into new, practical objects we use every day. Recycling is beneficial to the environment and to us, and in no time at all, you should find it as natural and instinctive as breathing!

Local Companies

Midwest Metals Corporation
(502) 244-6063
13051 Forest Centre Ct
Louisville, KY
Appliance Disposal & Recycling Center
(502) 772-3989
2529 W Market St
Louisville, KY
Isa Recycling
(502) 515-7100
7100 Grade Ln
Louisville, KY
All American Recycling Co
(502) 968-5838
7200 Grade Ln
Louisville, KY
Southland Investment Corporation
(502) 969-6366
1010 Industrial Blvd
Louisville, KY
Freedom Metals Inc
(502) 637-7657
1225 S 15th St
Louisville, KY
Rumpke of Kentucky
(502) 561-0505
1101 W Oak St
Louisville, KY
Sp Recycling
(502) 775-7500
Louisville, KY
River Metals Recycling Llc Office
(502) 585-5331
2045 River Rd
Louisville, KY
Recall Inc
(502) 776-8143
3131 W Market St
Louisville, KY

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Steps

  1. Ask your municipality for a recycling bin or 'dumpster'-style outdoor bin (these are generally blue or green, and usually free of charge).
  2. Request the list of recyclable materials from your local collector. Not all municipalities or cities accept empty milk cartons, for example, or used plastic grocery bags.
  3. Set up a place in your home for collection of clean paper, cans, plastic containers and unbroken glass. These will be clean although they can be somewhat unsightly. No need to worry about bugs or odors from here though. The bin for paper will probably be the largest. Paper waste is Compost
  4. Go to a landfill and see if there is anything of use.

Tips

  • See your local recycle regulations.
  • Rinse containers to help reduce any odours.
  • Wash the indoor bin regularly with soap or bleach.
  • If you live in an apartment and have only a small bin, which you might be obliged to leave on a porch or shared balcony, use an indelible marker to mark your address on it.
  • If you can't have a compost pile or bin consider a worm bin for kitchen food scraps or an indoor composter. Indoor composting and worm composting in odor free. Some indoor composters run on electricity.
  • Join freecycle to give away unwanted household items such as furniture
  • Set up recycle cans or bins around the house wherever you have a garbage can to reduce waste on the spot.
  • Crush plastic containers and cans because it saves space in your cans and in the truck that transports them.
  • To cut down on clutter, consider an can and plastic crushing recycling bin such as the Ecopod.
  • List just about anything including boxes on Craigslist in the free area.
  • Challenge yourself to reduce your garbage by half. Even if you are recycling now this can be a great challenge to try to reduce or re-use as many items as possible.
  • Expand your awareness and educate yourself about recycling so that the process becomes more efficient over time.
  • The best paper to recycle is computer paper. The least useful is construction paper. Shredded paper is difficult to separate so it goes into a lower grade paper. Only shred what you must shred.
  • Think of new ways to re use old items that you would usually put in the landfill.
  • Recycling can be even easier if your community has mixed recycling.Because you would only need two containers then one for mixed and one for glass.
  • Reuse, or donate for reuse, as much as you can. Reduce packaging and use of materials can also help in reducing landfill waste.
  • Many states provide small cash rewards for each item recycled, so it's a good idea to save up the items until you have enough to buy something with the rewards.
  • Try to avoid making special trips in your car to recycle, as you will be using fuel unnecessarily. Combine it with a trip you are making anyway.
  • Don't just think of the normal items you can recycle, do some research and expand it. Some things you might be able to recycle easily are:
    • Junk Mail
    • Batteries (very important)
    • Beer and Wine bottles
    • Paper and plastic bags
    • Magazines, Newspapers, phonebooks
  • Automobile fluids should be recycled too. Take used oil and other fluids to a local repair shop and they will recycle it for you.

Warnings

  • descriptionBins are free, but they can get stolen, especially in the city. Putting your address on it is a handy deterrent.
  • Never put biodegradable organic materials in recycling (meat, egg shells, bones). These will be refused, and animals are likely to be attracted to the scent and make a mess that nobody will appreciate. Compost these items instead.
  • Soiled tissues, diapers, fabrics, broken glass, toxic materials, etc. will not be accepted. The worker(s) will usually leave such items in your bin.
  • Lots of places have hazardous waste facilities. Check these out for toxic wastes.

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to How to Set Up a Home Recycling System. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

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5228 River Road
Cincinnati, OH

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