Paint

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should take household quantities of latex and oil-based paint free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal. Latex paint in good condition will be recycled. Avoid having to dispose of paint by buying only what you need.

 

Paint Cans

Remove the lids from empty latex paint cans and allow any residue to dry out. Afterwards you can put the can and lid in the trash separately. DO NOT put paint cans or lids in your Single Stream Recycling cart.

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should bring household quantities of oil-based paint cans free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal. Do not put these in the trash, even if they're empty.

 

Paint Thinner

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should take household quantities of paint thinner and other solvents free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal. Avoid having to dispose of paint thinner by buying only what you need.

 

Pallets

Pay-As-You-Throw customers can set out pallets during their bulky item collection. Please place the pallets with other non-metal items.

You may be able to dispose of pallets at local landfills for a fee.

 

Pamphlets

City of Austin Solid Waste Services Customers (SWS) can recycle pamphlets by putting them in their Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

If you are not a SWS customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put pamphlets in your trash or in your recycling.

Ecology Action accepts paper at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Paper

City of Austin Solid Waste Services customers can use their recycling cart to dispose of:

  • Catalogs
  • Colored Paper
  • Envelopes
  • Greeting Cards
  • Home Office Paper
  • Junk Mail
  • Magazines
  • Newspapers
  • Wrapping Paper

Solid Waste Services cannot recycle tissue, facial or toilet tissue, paper towels or napkins, or any wet or food-stained paper.

If you are not a SWS customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put paper products in your trash or in your recycling.

Ecology Action accepts similar paper to Solid Waste Services at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Paper Bags

See: Bags - Paper.

 

Paper Ream Wrappers

Pay-As-You-Throw customers can recycle paper ream wrappers by putting them in their Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

If you are not a Pay-As-You-Throw customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put paper ream wrappers in your trash or in your recycling.

Ecology-Action accepts paper at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Paperboard

Solid Waste Services now recycles paperboard or boxboard, the paper used to make cereal boxes, soda cartons, shoe boxes and similar boxes. Paperboard can be placed in your Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

Paperboard can also be taken to Ecology Action's downtown drop off center for recycling, or compost it in your back yard.

 

Pesticides

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should take household quantities of pesticides free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal. Empty containers cannot be recycled and should be put in your trash. Avoid having to dispose of pesticides by buying only what you need.

 

Phone Books

Phone books can be placed in your Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables. Check with local grocery stores for other places to recycle phone books.

 

Photographic Chemicals

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should take household quantities of photographic chemicals free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal.

 

Pizza Boxes

Solid Waste Services cannot recycle pizza boxes due to food and grease contamination. Please put pizza boxes in your garbage cart.

 

Plastic

Plastics #1 - #7 are recyclable through Solid Waste Services’ Single Stream Recycling service. These items can be placed in your Single Stream Recycling cart. (Recycling numbers are usually located on the bottom or the side of an item.)

Note: If the bottle contained motor oil, pesticides, herbicides, adhesives, paints or solvents, it cannot be recycled no matter what type of plastic it was made from.

 

Plastic Bags

See Bags - Plastic.

 

Plastic Bottles

Pay-As-You-Throw customers can recycle most plastic bottles that are made from #1 - #7 at the curb. Put them in your Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

Motor oil bottles, pesticide bottles, herbicide bottles, and glue and other adhesive bottles cannot be recycled no matter what type of plastic they are made from.
If you are not a Pay-As-You-Throw customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put plastic bottles in your trash or in your recycling.

Ecology-Action accepts #1 and #2 plastic bottles at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Plastic Jars & Tubs

Plastic jars and tubs, such as margarine containers, yogurt containers, peanut butter containers, etc. that are made from plastic #1 - #7 can be recycled by placing them in your Single Stream Recycling cart.

Ecology-Action accepts these types of plastic tubs at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Plastic Product Packaging

Solid Waste Services CANNOT recycle plastic product packaging at the curb. Please put them in your trash.

 

Plastic Utensils

Plastic utensils made from plastic #1 - #7 can be recycled at the curb. Please put them in your Single Stream Recycling cart.

 

Plastic Wrap

Solid Waste Services cannot recycle plastic wrap at the curb. Please put them in your garbage cart.

 

Plywood

You may be able to donate plywood in good condition to the Habitat for Humanity RE-store or dispose of it at local landfills for a fee. Solid Waste Services cannot collect it during bulky item collections.

 

Pool Chemicals

Residents of the City of Austin and Travis County should take household quantities of pool chemicals free of charge to the Household Hazardous Waste Facility for safe disposal. Avoid having to dispose of pool chemicals by buying only what you need.

Never put pool chemicals in your trash. Many pool chemicals give of fumes that can be harmful to collection workers.

 

Posters

Pay-As-You-Throw customers can recycle posters by putting them in their Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

If you are not a Pay-As-You-Throw customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put posters in your trash or in your recycling.
Ecology Action accepts paper at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

"Post-it" Notes

Pay-As-You-Throw customers can recycle "Post-it" notes by putting them in their Single Stream Recycling cart with other recyclables.

If you are not a Pay-As-You-Throw customer, consult your waste company or building manager about whether to put "Post-it" notes in your trash or in your recycling.

Ecology Action accepts paper at its downtown Austin recycling drop off center.

 

Product Samples

Solid Waste Services cannot recycle product samples at the curb. Please put them in your garbage cart.

 

Recycling Services in Austin, Texas

A B S Metal Recycling LLC
6001 FM 973 South
Dell Valley, TX
(512) 826-0797

Organics By Gosh
13602 FM 969
Austin, TX
(512) 276-1211

Recycling Center
9405 Dessau Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 836-7512

ROUND2 INC
6301 E Stassney Ln Bldg 6 Ste 400
Austin, TX
(512) 342-8855 

Austin Shred
2101 E St Elmo Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 744-4999

Austin Shredding & Records Storage
106 E 6th St
Austin, TX
(512) 686-3121

Balcones Recycling Inc
2416 E 6th St
Austin, TX
(512) 472-6200

Centex Green
8834 N Capital Of Texas Hwy
Austin, TX
(512) 750-1739

Clawson Disposal Service
Georgetown, TX
(512) 746-2000

Electronics Recycling & Trading
6106 Baldwin Dr
Austin, TX
(512) 927-2300

L & M Woodwaste Recycling Inc
10800 Decker Ln
Austin, TX
(512) 278-9330

Philip Reclamation Services
464 Commercial Dr
Buda, TX
(512) 312-9338

Recycling Services Inc
6402 Mcneil Dr Ste 45A
Austin, TX
(512) 250-0360

Red River Service Corp
4004 W Hwy 290
Dripping Springs, TX
(512) 858-0400

Space Age Recycle Solutions ( SARS Recycling )
ISO 14001:2008 Certification
8134 Interchange Pkwy
San Antonio, TX
210-656-SARS (7277)

Travis County Of Environment Recycling
1010 Lavaca St
Austin, TX
(512) 854-4496

TRI Recycling Inc
3600 Lyons Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 329-0172

Trusty Pickup Recycling Service
9229 Hopeland Dr
Austin, TX
(512) 347-1026

Recycling Services in Austin, Texas

A B S Metal Recycling LLC
6001 FM 973 South
Dell Valley, TX
(512) 826-0797

Organics By Gosh
13602 FM 969
Austin, TX
(512) 276-1211

Recycling Center
9405 Dessau Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 836-7512

ROUND2 INC
6301 E Stassney Ln Bldg 6 Ste 400
Austin, TX
(512) 342-8855 

Austin Shred
2101 E St Elmo Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 744-4999

Austin Shredding & Records Storage
106 E 6th St
Austin, TX
(512) 686-3121

Balcones Recycling Inc
2416 E 6th St
Austin, TX
(512) 472-6200

Centex Green
8834 N Capital Of Texas Hwy
Austin, TX
(512) 750-1739

Clawson Disposal Service
Georgetown, TX
(512) 746-2000

Electronics Recycling & Trading
6106 Baldwin Dr
Austin, TX
(512) 927-2300

L & M Woodwaste Recycling Inc
10800 Decker Ln
Austin, TX
(512) 278-9330

Philip Reclamation Services
464 Commercial Dr
Buda, TX
(512) 312-9338

Recycling Services Inc
6402 Mcneil Dr Ste 45A
Austin, TX
(512) 250-0360

Red River Service Corp
4004 W Hwy 290
Dripping Springs, TX
(512) 858-0400

Space Age Recycle Solutions ( SARS Recycling )
ISO 14001:2008 Certification
8134 Interchange Pkwy
San Antonio, TX
210-656-SARS (7277)

Travis County Of Environment Recycling
1010 Lavaca St
Austin, TX
(512) 854-4496

TRI Recycling Inc
3600 Lyons Rd
Austin, TX
(512) 329-0172

Trusty Pickup Recycling Service
9229 Hopeland Dr
Austin, TX
(512) 347-1026

Reducing environmental impact
Green building practices aim to reduce the environmental impact of new buildings. Buildings account for a large amount of land use, energy and water consumption, and air and atmosphere alteration. Considering the statistics, reducing the amount of natural resources buildings consume and the amount of pollution given off is seen as crucial for future sustainability, according to EPA. The building sector alone accounts for 30-40 percent of global energy use. Over 80 percent of the environmentally harmful emissions from buildings are due to energy consumption during the times when the buildings are in use. Green building does not typically include the concept of renovations although many of the 2050 homes are already built and UK homes account for 30% of UK Carbon Emissions. Domestic energy improvement targets of 20% between now and 2010, and again by a further 20% between 2010 and 2020 have been suggested by the UK government. The environmental impact of buildings is often underestimated, while the perceived costs of green buildings are overestimated. A recent survey by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development finds that green costs are overestimated by 300 percent, as key players in real estate and construction estimate the additional cost at 17 percent above conventional construction, more than triple the true average cost difference of about 5 percent. According to the UK Green Building Council, existing buildings account for 17% of the UK's total carbon emissions.

Goals of green building

The Blu Homes mkSolaire, a green building designed by Michelle Kaufmann.The concept of sustainable development can be traced to the energy (especially fossil oil) crisis and the environment pollution concern in the 1970s. The green building movement in the U.S. originated from the need and desire for more energy efficient and environmentally friendly construction practices. There are a number of motives to building green, including environmental, economic, and social benefits. However, modern sustainability initiatives call for an integrated and synergistic design to both new construction and in the retrofitting of an existing structure. Also known as sustainable design, this approach integrates the building life-cycle with each green practice employed with a design-purpose to create a synergy amongst the practices used.

Green building brings together a vast array of practices and techniques to reduce and ultimately eliminate the impacts of new buildings on the environment and human health. It often emphasizes taking advantage of renewable resources, e.g., using sunlight through passive solar, active solar, and photovoltaic techniques and using plants and trees through green roofs, rain gardens, and for reduction of rainwater run-off. Many other techniques, such as using packed gravel or permeable concrete instead of conventional concrete or asphalt to enhance replenishment of ground water, are used as well.

While the practices, or technologies, employed in green building are constantly evolving and may differ from region to region, there are fundamental principles that persist from which the method is derived: Siting and Structure Design Efficiency, Energy Efficiency, Water Efficiency, Materials Efficiency, Indoor Environmental Quality Enhancement, Operations and Maintenance Optimization, and Waste and Toxics Reduction. The essence of green building is an optimization of one or more of these principles. Also, with the proper synergistic design, individual green building technologies may work together to produce a greater cumulative effect.

On the aesthetic side of green architecture or sustainable design is the philosophy of designing a building that is in harmony with the natural features and resources surrounding the site. There are several key steps in designing sustainable buildings: specify 'green' building materials from local sources, reduce loads, optimize systems, and generate on-site renewable energy.

Siting and structure design efficiency
See also: Sustainable design
The foundation of any construction project is rooted in the concept and design stages. The concept stage, in fact, is one of the major steps in a project life cycle, as it has the largest impact on cost and performance. In designing environmentally optimal buildings, the objective is to minimize the total environmental impact associated with all life-cycle stages of the building project. However, building as a process is not as streamlined as an industrial process, and varies from one building to the other, never repeating itself identically. In addition, buildings are much more complex products, composed of a multitude of materials and components each constituting various design variables to be decided at the design stage. A variation of every design variable may affect the environment during all the building's relevant life-cycle stages.

Energy efficiency
Main articles: Low-energy house and Zero-energy building
Green buildings often include measures to reduce energy use. To increase the efficiency of the building envelope, (the barrier between conditioned and unconditioned space), they may use high-efficiency windows and insulation in walls, ceilings, and floors. Another strategy, passive solar building design, is often implemented in low-energy homes. Designers orient windows and walls and place awnings, porches, and trees to shade windows and roofs during the summer while maximizing solar gain in the winter. In addition, effective window placement (daylighting) can provide more natural light and lessen the need for electric lighting during the day. Solar water heating further reduces energy loads.

Onsite generation of renewable energy through solar power, wind power, hydro power, or biomass can significantly reduce the environmental impact of the building. Power generation is generally the most expensive feature to add to a building.

Water efficiency
Water conservation
Reducing water consumption and protecting water quality are key objectives in sustainable building. One critical issue of water consumption is that in many areas, the demands on the supplying aquifer exceed its ability to replenish itself. To the maximum extent feasible, facilities should increase their dependence on water that is collected, used, purified, and reused on-site. The protection and conservation of water throughout the life of a building may be accomplished by designing for dual plumbing that recycles water in toilet flushing. Waste-water may be minimized by utilizing water conserving fixtures such as ultra-low flush toilets and low-flow shower heads. Bidets help eliminate the use of toilet paper, reducing sewer traffic and increasing possibilities of re-using water on-site. Point of use water treatment and heating improves both water quality and energy efficiency while reducing the amount of water in circulation. The use of non-sewage and greywater for on-site use such as site-irrigation will minimize demands on the local aquifer.

Materials efficiency
Sustainable architecture
Building materials typically considered to be 'green' include rapidly renewable plant materials like bamboo (because bamboo grows quickly) and straw, lumber from forests certified to be sustainably managed, ecology blocks, dimension stone, recycled stone, recycled metal, and other products that are non-toxic, reusable, renewable, and/or recyclable (e.g. Trass, Linoleum, sheep wool, panels made from paper flakes, compressed earth block, adobe, baked earth, rammed earth, clay, vermiculite, flax linen, sisal, seagrass, cork, expanded clay grains, coconut, wood fibre plates, calcium sand stone, concrete (high and ultra high performance, roman self-healing concrete The EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) also suggests using recycled industrial goods, such as coal combustion products, foundry sand, and demolition debris in construction projects  Building materials should be extracted and manufactured locally to the building site to minimize the energy embedded in their transportation. Where possible, building elements should be manufactured off-site and delivered to site, to maximise benefits of off-site manufacture including minimising waste, maximising recycling (because manufacture is in one location), high quality elements, better OHS management, less noise and dust.

Indoor environmental quality enhancement
Indoor Air Quality
The Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) category in LEED standards, one of the five environmental categories, was created to provide comfort, well-being, and productivity of occupants. The LEED IEQ category addresses design and construction guidelines especially: indoor air quality (IAQ), thermal quality, and lighting quality.

Indoor Air Quality seeks to reduce volatile organic compounds, or VOC's, and other air impurities such as microbial contaminants. Buildings rely on a properly designed HVAC system to provide adequate ventilation and air filtration as well as isolate operations (kitchens, dry cleaners, etc.) from other occupancies. During the design and construction process choosing construction materials and interior finish products with zero or low emissions will improve IAQ. Many building materials and cleaning/maintenance products emit toxic gases, such as VOC's and formaldehyde. These gases can have a detrimental impact on occupants' health and productivity as well. Avoiding these products will increase a building's IEQ.

Personal temperature and airflow control over the HVAC system coupled with a properly designed building envelope will also aid in increasing a building's thermal quality. Creating a high performance luminous environment through the careful integration of natural and artificial light sources will improve on the lighting quality of a structure.

Operations and maintenance optimization
No matter how sustainable a building may have been in its design and construction, it can only remain so if it is operated responsibly and maintained properly. Ensuring operations and maintenance(O&M) personnel are part of the project's planning and development process will help retain the green criteria designed at the onset of the project.[20] Every aspect of green building is integrated into the O&M phase of a building's life. The addition of new green technologies also falls on the O&M staff. Although the goal of waste reduction may be applied during the design, construction and demolition phases of a building's life-cycle, it is in the O&M phase that green practices such as recycling and air quality enhancement take place.

Waste reduction
Green architecture also seeks to reduce waste of energy, water and materials used during construction. For example, in California nearly 60% of the state's waste comes from commercial buildings. During the construction phase, one goal should be to reduce the amount of material going to landfills. Well-designed buildings also help reduce the amount of waste generated by the occupants as well, by providing on-site solutions such as compost bins to reduce matter going to landfills.

To reduce the impact on wells or water treatment plants, several options exist. "Greywater", wastewater from sources such as dishwashing or washing machines, can be used for subsurface irrigation, or if treated, for non-potable purposes, e.g., to flush toilets and wash cars. Rainwater collectors are used for similar purposes.

Centralized wastewater treatment systems can be costly and use a lot of energy. An alternative to this process is converting waste and wastewater into fertilizer, which avoids these costs and shows other benefits. By collecting human waste at the source and running it to a semi-centralized biogas plant with other biological waste, liquid fertilizer can be produced. This concept was demonstrated by a settlement in Lubeck Germany in the late 1990s. Practices like these provide soil with organic nutrients and create carbon sinks that remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, offsetting greenhouse gas emission. Producing artificial fertilizer is also more costly in energy than this process.

Cost and payoff
The most criticized issue about constructing environmentally friendly buildings is the price. Photo-voltaics, new appliances, and modern technologies tend to cost more money. Most green buildings cost a premium of <2%, but yield 10 times as much over the entire life of the building. The stigma is between the knowledge of up-front cost vs. life-cycle cost. The savings in money come from more efficient use of utilities which result in decreased energy bills. It is projected that different sectors could save $130 Billion on energy bills. Also, higher worker or student productivity can be factored into savings and cost deductions.

Studies have shown over a 20 year life period, some green buildings have yielded $53 to $71 per square foot back on investment. Confirming the rentability of green building investments, further studies of the commercial real estate market have found that LEED and Energy Star certified buildings achieve significantly higher rents, sale prices and occupancy rates as well as lower capitalization rates potentially reflecting lower investment risk.
 

About the Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure (ECAD) Ordinance
The Austin City Council approved the Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure
(ECAD) ordinance, Austin City Code Chapter 6-7, to improve the energy efficiency
of Austin homes and buildings that receive electricity from Austin Energy.

View the Guide for Homebuyers, Homesellers, and Homeowners (pdf) to
learn which Austin Energy incentives can help homeowners meet ECAD requirements.


Improving energy efficiency can help reduce electricity bills for renters and owners of homes, multifamily properties, and commercial buildings. The ordinance also helps meet one of the goals of the Austin Climate Protection Plan—offsetting 800 megawatts of peak energy demand by 2020 to reduce Austin’s carbon footprint.


Energy Conservation Audit and Disclosure

 - Determine If You Need an Audit -
To see if your home needs an energy audit, answer the questions on the online tool, the ECAD Audit Self Check.

 

All about Green Building in Central Texas

 

Helpful green building links

GREEN BUILDING DEFINED

Environmentally Friendly Green Mom?
ZERO waste plan ATXResidential & Commercial Recycling

Is Building Green Expensive?

Why build Green?

Green Air conditioning & HeatingEnergy Conservation Audit & Disclosure

Building Green is a MUST

Austin TX Photos

Wikipedia- What's Green?

Step by step Building Green

Green Design Concepts

video             Global Warming

.................Did You know??  

Building Green PRINCIPLES

Cork Flooring

Bamboo Flooring

Marmoleum Flooring

VOCs in Paint

Eco Friendly Siding

Green Roof

LIVE Green Roof

Green Walls

Green Rated Windows

Countertops

Dual Flush Toilets

Solar Panels

Green Bulbs

Insulation

Earth Blocks

 

 

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8 types of Renewable energy

Bio-fuel & Biomass

Biogas

Distributed/Embedded Generation

Fuel Cell/ Hydrogen / Batteries

Energy from Waste

Solar

Water (hydro, Tidal, wave)

Wind

Residential & Commercial Recycling

 

 

 

 

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