What You Can Do
If you are planning a construction or remodeling project, there are a number of things you can do before you start:
- Contact your local builder's association, your county solid waste
department, or your state environmental agency. They will provide information
on recyclers and waste haulers in your area.
- Consider whether deconstruction techniques can be used to prepare
your site for renovation or construction. In some communities, deconstruction
auctions are being effectively used to move building materials into
the reuse market.
- Check with local salvagers before purchasing new products. You might
be surprised to find that many of them offer cabinets, doors, windows,
and flooring that are in good condition for greatly reduced prices.
- Browse the ReUse People Web site. Reuse People, Inc. is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to reducing the solid waste stream entering our landfills by diverting and salvaging usable building materials and providing them to individuals, businesses and families, including low-income families in Mexico.
You will need Adobe Reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's PDF page to learn more.
- Consult the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer's publication, Unified Facilities Criteria, #UFC-1-1900-01 (December 2002), Selection
of Methods for the Reduction, Reuse, and Recycling of Demolition Waste (PDF) (102 pp, 1MB) .
This document can assist users in determining the most feasible methods
for reducing C&D debris being disposed of in landfills.
- Donate the C&D materials that you are not planning to use to
a local affiliate of Habitat
for Humanity .
- Find useful advice from the C&D Waste Reduction and Recycling
series factsheets produced by EPA Region 9:
- Calculating Effectiveness: The Waste Management Plan (PDF) (2 pp, 228K)
- Reducing Waste for Building Owners (PDF) (2 pp, 129K)
- Setting up a Jobsite Recycling Program (PDF) (2 pp, 210K)
- Source
Reduction in Residential Remodeling: The Las Alturas Adobe (PDF) (2 pp, 86K)
- Consult the Field Guide for Residential Remodelers.
This field guide prepared by the National Association of Home Builders
(NAHB) Research Center provides remodelers with information on cost-effective
and voluntary construction waste management. The Remodeler's Field
Guide addresses the unique aspects of remodeling, including differences
in waste generation and site and work characteristics.
- Introduction (PDF) (4 pp, 56K)
- Remodeler's
Field Guide (PDF) (20 pp, 61K)
- Introduction (PDF) (4 pp, 56K)
- To reduce lead hazards check EPA resources on Remodeling or Renovating a Home with Lead-Based Paint.