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Bellingham, Washington Sidewalk Sections Made From Recycled Toilets

Toilets Porcelain Sidewalks

Posted: 03/13/2012 2:59 pm

By Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer:

What do you do with 5 tons of old toilets? The city of Bellingham, Wash., found a creative (and sustainable) answer: Make sidewalk.

A section of a sidewalk installed as part of a road improvement project replaces conventional concrete with so-called "poticrete," which contains crushed porcelain instead of gravel.

The pieces of old toilets, crushed into three-quarter inch (1.9-centimeter) pieces, replaces about one dump-truck load of gravel, which would otherwise come out of a hillside somewhere, and saves about 5 tons of material -- the toilets -- from a landfill, according to project engineer Freeman Anthony.

When crushed up, the porcelain looks and performs like rocks, Anthony told LiveScience. [Photos: Making of a Green Road]

The city used the poticrete in a small part of sidewalk in the the half-mile (0.8-kilometer) Meador Kansas Ellis Trail project in Bellingham. The project, which improved sidewalk and road along an existing corridor, is the first roadway construction project to earn a Greenroads certification. Greenroads is an independentrating system developed at the University of Washington to promote sustainable roadway construction, similar to LEED certification for environmentally friendly buildings.

The project, which was completed at the end of the year, also made use of about 80 tons of crushed, recycled concrete, and about 30 percent of asphalt laid down was recycled material. Porous concrete was included to reduce runoff, low-energy LED lights were added to reduce electricity use, and the project itself improved pedestrian and bicycle access.

The toilets came from the Bellingham Housing Authority, which had received a federal grant to replace its old toilets with more water-efficient, low-flow toilets. A local nonprofit, Sustainable Connections, helped the housing authority secure the grant, and the nonprofit called Anthony with the suggestion that the city make use of the porcelain.

The project's contractor, Larry Brown Construction Inc., installed the poticrete. The recycled materials used cost slightly less than conventional ones, Anthony said.

"The long and short of it is, there is a lot of useful material out there that can be used in public construction projects," he said.

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Wynne Parry on Twitter @Wynne_Parry. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.


Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer: What do you do with 5 tons of old toilets? The city of Bellingham, Wash., found a creative (and sustainable) answer: Make sidewalk. A section of a side...
By Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer: What do you do with 5 tons of old toilets? The city of Bellingham, Wash., found a creative (and sustainable) answer: Make sidewalk. A section of a side...
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07:25 PM on 10/13/2012
I like this! we need to have more recycle spots in the USA!
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
10:24 PM on 03/14/2012
There is no need to throw one single thing into a landfill. Everything can be recycled, reused or repurposed. This is one example.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
03:31 PM on 03/17/2012
Quite so! A higher ideal that everyone should be working towards.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:10 PM on 04/26/2012
fanned. We need our wastes, they must not be dumped.
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
10:34 PM on 03/13/2012
they should make that stuff in 2 foot squares... then when they have to repair a small spot in sidewalks they can cut out the bad section, and regrade that and then cut and tile in the poticrete.... eventually they will have a complete ceramic based sidewalk that would wear well and they will not have to do it all at once. They can repair everywhere spreading out the costs across the neighborhoods. Using material that would be filling a landfill. The stuff could be brilliant for repair work. Could you imagine how many toilets new york city tosses? and you probably could even color the mix. A supply of repair material for the local highway departments. could be used for suspended sidewalks where cables have to run below.. make bricks for retaining walls and landscaping

very interesting stuff.
04:30 PM on 03/13/2012
Lol awesome idea. Im suer sidewalks are plenty covered in poo. I do hope they sanitized the crushed toilets. Contagion anyone. Don't forget to wash your feet. lol
07:25 PM on 03/13/2012
Please tell me you are kidding. Contagion? kidding, right?
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
10:36 PM on 03/13/2012
Superbug... I feel a Marvel Comic coming on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vetxcl
03:35 PM on 03/17/2012
A natural reaction and one I had myself, but reading more about the process assuages any unrealistic fear/anxieties. It's wasteful (pun intended) not to use porcelain or to just put it in landfills that are already overwhelmed.