Don’t forget to celebrate America Recycles Day tomorrow! The poll is in, we think this year’s slogan “It all comes back to you” is both a promise and a threat. We also think polls are fun and look forward to better ones down the road. US residents, click here for a listing of local events.
Author Archive
America Recycles Day
Friday, November 14, 2008Reblog: Styrofoam robot via Dinasoars and Robots
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Here’s the original post. This has got to be the best use ever for the space-shaped and, I thought but was clearly wrong, utterly nonreusable styrofoam pieces that come with just about any appliance one buys. This guy kind of reminds me of being a nature camp cousellor summers in Central PA. Each year the day camp chose a super hero like the Recycling Ranger and made one of the college student interns dress up and teach the kids stuff. I think it was the Garbage Guru who led us each week in the chant: “I say styrofoam, you say leave it alone.”
“Styrofoam!”
“Leave it alone!”
“Styrofoam!”
“Leave it alone!”
Ah, good times. I haven’t played recycle tag for YEARS. Remind me some other time to tell you about the camp’s director of Native American eduaction, the self-dubbed Injun Ed.
Skräp
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Skräp is Swedish for trash. It is also the title of what I am told (by my friend Victor who is Swedish and half way through it) is a rad book in which this guy Mattias Hagberg tracks his own waste then follows it all the way to Ghana, which is where Sweden exports some of its solid waste. Swedish speakers, here’s the link to the publisher. The rest of us will sadly have to wait for Victor to finish reading and/or the commercial release of an English translation.
DUMPSTERS, TRASH and RUBBLE
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Photographer Manuel Branco takes pictures of dumpsters, trash and rubble. Like gartog colleagues Chris Jordan and Last Night’s Garbage, Branco’s work magnifies and abstracts these commonly ignored subjects. The result is a glossy and unique collection of images that dwell on color and force the viewer to examine discarded materials in a new light. Some of these photos can be found in the book DUMPSTERS, TRASH and RUBBLE – Elements of Abstraction which is for sale and will soon be updated in an expanded version. Check out more of Branco’s work on Flickr, JPG Magazine or imagekind.
Trashtastic Tuesday with Professor Sigurd Grava
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
An urban planning friend recently sent me this link to The Tipping Point issue of URBAN magazine, a periodical put out by Columbia University. In it, the editors poll faculty on the question: “If you could tip something, what would you tip?” The experts were left to interpret “tip” as they wished. Professor Sigurd Grava took it to mean tipping in the trashy sense and suggested we tip tipping policies. Here’s an excerpt from his response:
“My proposal is to dramatically increase all tipping fees, thereby using them as the instrument to reform the entire production and distribution chain of our effluent society. This would apply particularly to consumer products. For example, disposable, single-use items that make our lives more convenient (from paper towels to flow pens) would have to be made of materials that disappear easily. Complex and large things, such as automobiles, would have to be so designed that they can be readily taken apart at the end and various materials segregated. Wrappers and packaging materials, the scourge of our civilization, would be replaced by thin but tough films that burn harmlessly or disintegrate elegantly.”
After reading this intriguing blurb, I contacted Professor Grava with a couple of follow up questions, which he was kind enough answers. Happy Tuesday!
—
everydaytrash: How would heavy tipping fees move up the production chain to impact manufacturers and those who create the waste in the first place?
Grava: I believe recycling can only work effectively if it has a financial base (not just rules and regulations) by adding recovery to the production/distribution/marketing/usage chain — MONEY as the propellant. This can be tipping fees, special charges, built in value in the product, or any other mechanism. Large scale experimentation should allow us to determine which works best.
everydaytrash: In your international work, have you come across solid waste and recycling systems that could serve as role models for American cities?
Grava: Yes — the most effective process is SCAVENGING, at various levels of formal organization. It ranges from casual pick-up of material on the street (almost anywhere) to clans with monopoly rights to collect stuff, separate and recover on sites where these families live, and maintaining piggeries (in Egypt). There are obviously serious issues in sanitation, livability, and discrimination, but the process works.
Dump truck downloaded from the Waste News clip art archive.
Abundance: Dawson City Trash Project
Monday, November 10, 2008
This summer, artist Max Liboiron built a large-scale diarama of and about trash in the Yukon Territory of Canada. Using trash from the local landfill, she created an incredible artistic and educational space mapping dumping grounds past and present in Dawson City. The result is a deceptively simple landscape that speaks to our complicated relationship with what we throw away, and where we throw it. Here are a few images ripped from the project site.

For more on the creative process, check out the Dawson City Trash Project blog.

And for more on the artist, check out her other projects.
Wonkity wonk wonk
Monday, November 10, 2008Tipster emeritus Kimberly K. just sent me this link to a working paper on “take-back” policies from Harvard Business School. The document lays out a framework for evaluating the impact of such anti-trash policies, a useful tool for down the road as governments pass more and more legislation aimed at holding companies responsible for the end lives of the products they send out into the universe. The framework organizes criteria for effective policies into three categories: mitigating environmental and public health risks, promoting cost efficiency and protecting occupational health and safety. Frustratingly, there aren’t yet enough good policies out there to provide the data to really analyze what works. But those interested in the political side of trash might be interested in the full article, which covers examples from the states, Europe and that mecca of good garbage policy, Japan.
Flatbush FreeMeet, 11/22
Monday, November 10, 2008Attention Brooklynites: Sustainable Flatbush is planning an anything-you-can-carry swap on November 22nd. Check out their blog for more details on the event, which will include wire hanger and electronics recycling. Attention rest of the world: try this at home.
The “Blog” of “Unnecessary” Quotation Marks
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Only tangentially trash-related, but a key resource to wasting time online. Image ripped from The “Blog” of “Unnecessary” Quotation Marks.
VOTE
Tuesday, November 4, 2008It all comes back to you:: take the poll
Saturday, November 1, 2008Don’t read this post without taking the poll (pretty please). I’m super excited for this handy new everydaytrash.com feature.
Halloween, day of the dead, election day, Thanksgiving…it’s festive season in America. To add to to fun, November 15th is national America Recycles Day. Interested trashies can take a break from all those outraged, election-themed forwards and petitions to take a recycling pledge. This year the event carries the theme “it all comes back to you,” which I find amusing since the tone could be read according to your world view (TAKE THE POLL!! TAKE THE POLL!! I JUST LEARNED HOW TO INSERT ONE!!).
For the jaded and the journalists who don’t sign petitions, there’s a link to find out the details about what can be recycled in your community and where and how to do that. This is a question that I, as a garblogger, get all the time. Of course, I couldn’t get the link to work. Let me know if you figure it out. In the meantime, I’ll search for another. That shit changes all the time and it’s nice to know whether washing out the bluberry containers is worthwhile or if the city decided only plastic shaped like bottles deserves a second chance at purposeful existance.
For my local peeps, NYC will host “Green Screens” a weekend of electronic recycling events (leave a comment if you’re interested in volunteering and I’ll forward you an email request the CENYC sent out).
P.S. Please take the poll.
AfriGadget and creative recycling
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Bookmark this site, trashies. It’s a blog highlighting creative, African grown soultions. The AfriGadget tagline is “Solving everyday problems with African ingenuity”. Case in point: this post on iron workers in Kenya who fashion chisels from old vehicle gearshifts and automate bellows with old bike parts. Photo ripped from AfriGadget, click through for a video of this simple machine in action.
ScrapCycle
Monday, October 27, 2008Now this is my kind of show: a piece of trash is your entry fee for a night of experimental sounds and sights known as ScrapCycle.
RIP Sister Emanuelle
Sunday, October 26, 2008From Voice of America: “Born in Brussels, Sister Emmanuelle lived and worked with a scavenger community in Cairo for more than 20 years. She founded an association that built a school and provided trucks for the Zabbaleen community there, which has become internationally known for its recycling practices.”
Via FP Passport. Photo ripped from the Washington Post

I just discovered 


