Author Archive

Trashtastic Tuesday with Paul Gargagliano

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

trashwood2.jpg May-June is a horrifying season of waste on and near college campuses. Around this time of year, the over-satiated and less than imaginative undergraduates of our nation drag pounds upon pounds of perfectly good stuff to the curb simply because it won’t fit into their station wagons and storage lockers, or because it’s less of a hassle to just buy a new one next year.

Having grown up on a series of college campuses, this phenomneon particularly bums me out. Seeing piles of couches and text books, plastic storage bins and metal clothes hangers lining the streets of my town at the end of Spring Semester was a yearly reminder of the temporary and disposable view my quadranual roation of neighbors had for our community. This year, however, I am heartened. My friend Lydia lives in Philadelphia where she knows a guy named Paul Gargagliano. Paul Gargagliano, Lydia tells me, goes around on his bike salvaging the stuff tossed aside by the young and the wasteful. Hearing this, I had to know more. And so another Trashtastic Tuesday begins…

everydaytrash: How do you find the curbside items you reuse? Do you happen upon them, go out hunting, round up friends to help?

Paul Gargagliano: Here in West Philadelphia, come late May you have to try hard not to find great trash on the side of the road. At this special time, known as Penn Christmas to some, students at the University of Pennsylvania move away, and the school renovates building after building. Over the past three years UPenn students and the school itself have worked together to clothe and feed me, they have provided me with the materials to create shelter, given me artistic inspiration, made me wonder in awe at wealth accumulation and brought me many moments of unexpected joy. All up and down the streets of University City students create unweildy piles of bagged and unbagged goods. The university fills dumpsters with old furniture and leftover building materials. Most of the trash picking I do is with my friend Ben on Sunday and Monday nights, but I also go out alone. We almost exclusively travel by bicycyle. Ben is a little more selective than I am, which means that he tends to make it back to the house first because I’m so loaded down that I can barely pedal. I take a lot of things that I might never use because I can’t bear imagining the maw of a garbage truck crushing them up. Case in point, I recently brought home a baby monitor hoping I guess that somebody knew somebody who needed one. When we find wood we come home and get the car. Sometimes I’ll hide a larger item in an alley to come back for it with a vehicle.

everydaytrash: What’s your favorite thing you’ve ever found and salvaged?

Gargagliano: Rather here is a list of my favorite finds off the top of my head: a 1.5 liter orange Le Creuset sauce pan, a big red internal frame backpack that a friend is carrying around India right now, a delicious sheep’s milk cheese that I could never afford called Ewephoria, a massive maple lab table, a 36 cubby unit made out of oak ply that I put all my clothing in, a hefty Webster’s dictionary, over 1000 dollars worth of textbooks that a friend and I dutifully resold, 1 half bottle of Pimm’s liquor something I never would have tried otherwise.

everydaytrash: What sorts of things have you made out of the discarded items you salvage?

Gargagliano: Currently I am typing at an L shaped desk that Ben and I made out of laminated oak and and old maple lab table. Ben and I both made our beds, desks, and bedside tables out of salvaged wood.

everydaytrash: Do you think people become more or less wasteful as they become more educated?…as they age?

Gargagliano: I think that a person’s wastefulness is linked more directly to her relationship to consumer culture and the commodity fetish. If you believe that shopping is a valid passtime, then you will be forced to make room for the new things that you are constantly purchasing and bringing into your home. If you have no connection at all to the labor required to make a given object then you tend to invest much less in its maintenance and you toss it into the trash more readily. There are ways in which certain types of education about labor might bring out a consciousness of the commodity fetish and consumer culture, but an education at UPenn undergrad or at the school of dentistry, these things, have proven to create a rather wasteful class of people. Older people are often more jaded in general. They see through commercials that try to get them to spend their money here and there. And thus, they buy fewer things and throw away fewer things.

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Reblog: Gotham Gazette on NYC Trash Wars

Monday, June 18, 2007

protest_garbage.jpg Check out this photo and in-depth article posted on Gotham Gazette, always a prime source for trash news.  New York City’s marine transfer stations—the loading docks once used to dump trash out of dump trucks and onto barges, back when we had a working landfill just down river in Staten Island—have been at the heart of municipal sanitation politics for years now.  Every borough has at least one, but the richer neighborhoods are fighting hard to keep theirs closed.

The latest argument being tossed out there by the posher set is that using one such dock as a recycling plant would interrupt plans for a new park.  Clearly these guys don’t travel uptown all that much.

Reality Rubbish

Saturday, June 16, 2007

trash_tv.gif I guess I’m not the only one who finds trash a fascinating and entertaining topic.  A British paper reported today that ten reality show hopefuls have taken up residence at a local landfill as part of a competition to see who can best live off the fat of the land.  Contestants will have to live like freegans, including making their own shelters out of landfill waste.  The idea is to raise awareness (and ratings) around the vast amount we throw away.  Sadly, as taping has only just begun, my hunch is that the DVD release is years away!

Image via Stencil Punks.

Weekly Compactor

Saturday, June 16, 2007

cynthia.jpg This week in trash news:

Ghost Fleet

Friday, June 15, 2007

ghostfleet.jpg   How do you throw away an old war ship?  Apparently there are a bunch of ships docked around the country suffering from disrepair or simply outdated by newer models (you know how we love to create bigger and better military equipment).  Waste News reports that two out-of-commission pieces of a long-abandoned fleet in Virginia are headed for that great recycling plant in the sky.  I find it interesting that it takes one corporate contract to construct and another to dismantle the machines of war—to say nothing of the contracts commissioned to repair what we destroy using those machines.  Anyway, “ghost fleet” is a cool term for ships in reserve.  You gotta hand it to the military, you just can’t beat the lingo.

Photo from Wikipedia 

Reblog: Ecobags

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

eco-bags.jpg  I’m a little behind in reading other people’s blogs these days, but last night came across this somewhat dated but still fantastic post on Cool Hunting highlighting the latest in hip alternatives to plastic shopping bags.  Enjoy.  They’re from Japan, so you know they’re cool.

Trashtastic Tuesday: The Language of Trash

Monday, June 11, 2007

  This week on Trashtastic Tuesday, we take a moment to examine the word choice of trash talk.  In discussing our respective passions for the narrow yet highly bloggable subjects of chocolate and trash, my friend Emily Stone and I decided to dedicate a post each to language.  Below is a compilation of links to what the experts have to say about garbology, the concept of zero waste, sustainability and solid waste.  These are terms essential to the understanding of broader trash issues.  [Editor’s note:  In fact, if everydaytrash were a European blog, I would long ago have been kicked off the Internet for failing to define the key terms up front before marching on to present a solid argument in outline form.  Aplogies to any Europeans I may have confused in the past, consider this a new leaf.] 

Check out Chocolate in Context for a parellel glossery (with far more original reporting, I might add).  And while you’re over there, vote for Emily.  She’s <this> close to a free trip to California from some contest called “Grill Me.”

  • Wikipedia, almighty Internet resource, compiles the goods on garbology, the archeological study of people via sifting through what they throw away;
  • Gary Liss of the Grass Roots Recycling Network (GRRN) lays out the top resources on zero waste, the jihad againt excess;
  • Green fashion diva fiftyRx3 defines sustainability, the quest for lasting solutions to environmental problems;
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency redefines solid waste, the kind of trash the government collects.

Clip art from higheredcenter.org

Weekly Compactor (belated, but awesome)

Monday, June 11, 2007

This week in trash news:

Trash Hiatus

Friday, June 8, 2007

Travelling for a couple of days, the weekly compactor will be posted over the weekend.  Excuse the delay!

Trash City

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

city_designchallenge.jpg  As someone who reads a lot of garbage headlines, I can say with authority that Toronto is way into trash.  Media stories about how to green a community, waste export policy debates and grassroots organizing around reducing waste quite often carry Toronto datelines.  So, I wasn’t that surprised to see the local weekly, Eye Weekly focus on trash for an Earth Day special in a stellar compilation of blogworthy articles (thanks for the link, mom).

My favorite piece is an overview of the publications recent design challenge to build a better trash can.  Check out what the judges had to say about the three most innovative contenders.  The idea behind the contest was to build a vessel that would allow consumers to separate their waste, recognizing the diversity of what we throw away and the various places it should go.  Too cool.
I’m torn between the “JUSTDESIGN” and “TRASHIE” models.

Trashtastic Tuesday with the Composting Crew

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

compost11.jpg This week on Trashtastic Tuesday, we check in with some Middle Schoolers at the Brooklyn School for Collaborative Studies. This year, the students are taking part in a “Cafeteria Expedition,” an interactive project to improve and better understand school cafeterias. Alex Perez, Stephanie Rodriguez, Steven Ruiz, Grabriella Bobe and T.J. Bodden—members of the 8th grade composting crew—were nice enough to take the time to answer a few questions for everydaytrash.

everydaytrash: Why should a school like yours have a composting program?

Composting Crew: The reason why all schools should have a composting program is because we generate a lot of waste and composting can reduce that amount.

 

compost51.jpg

everydaytrash: How does reducing waste help your school?

Composting Crew: Because we are making it into something useful.

 

compost4.jpg

 

everydaytrash: How did you choose what kind of composting system to use?

Composting Crew: We went to the Botanic Gardens and saw what different kinds of composting bins that they had and choose which one we liked and would be best for our needs.

everydaytrash: What kinds of materials did you need to get started?

Composting Crew: We needed pallets, screws, nails, buckets, and waste. We had the pallets donated by Lowe’s and we carried them back to school.

compost3.jpg

 

everydaytrash: Who uses the composting soil you create?

Composting Crew: Every single person in our school will be able to use it. The first will be the grade school kids who will use it for their planters. After that we will donate it to locals for their gardens. Thank you for showing interest in our project. We learned a lot from this Cafeteria Expedition.

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Photos courtesy of the incomparable Peter Hoppmann—friend, neighbor and middle school teacher extraordinaire.

Trash TV

Sunday, June 3, 2007

thumb.jpg  Check out this hip little video from Current TV.  Episode “World of Trash” takes a closer look at what we throw away, where it goes and what can be done to reduce the flow.  Sound familiar? 

 It’s great to see trash out there as a hot topic in an ever greener world.  This is a great 101 to share with friends new to the wonky fascination.

Weekly Compactor

Friday, June 1, 2007

1_ylwtruk.jpg This week in trash news:

Sta’en I-lund

Thursday, May 31, 2007

ferry.jpg On Monday of this fabulous long weekend just past, I made the long overdue journey out to Staten Island to visit my aunt. I took the ferry and, for the first time in many moons, sat upstairs and outside to enjoy the views as I floated on.  It was such a beautiful day that I didn’t even mind the throngs of tourists and fleet week sailors crowding the decks.

On my way to Whitehall terminal to catch the boat, I bought an iced tea and drank it on the Subway platform. I took my last sip as my train rolled in and, smiling to myself, decided to hang on to the bottle so that I could deposit it in the brand new recycling bins at the ferry terminal, then blog and boast about it here.

I did, and here it is.  The bins, as promised, were easy to spot as I entered the ferry terminal, neatly color coded to separate paper from plastic and glass.  On the way home, however, it occurred to me that there are no bins ON the boat, or upstairs in the terminal—meaning that anything purchased on the ferry or while waiting for it to arrive is much less convenient to recycle.  You would have to know they’re there. 

Baby steps, I know.  Next time I take a ride, I’ll ask whether the concession stand recycles any of those beer bottles.   

Tips from a hardcore treehugger

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

parisrecycle.jpg  Tuesday wasn’t as trashtastic as one might have hoped this week.  I’m hanging on to this week’s interview until it’s good and ready.  I hope, with the long weekend and still-fading buzz of the first weekend of summer (sort of), you’ll cut me some slack.

And speaking of slack, Alina over at Closet Environmentalist has been picking it up on the garblogging front.  Check out her freshly posted guide to recycling, including tips on when NOT to recycle