Re: Wheelie Bins
Originally Posted by
j44ke
Building next door to our small 7 floor building is a block-thru, meaning it is 10 floors tall with one building half on 16th St and one building half on 15th St connected by an enclosed breezeway between blocks and takes up roughly 1/3 of the block on both streets. They produce a pile of contractor trash bags 20 feet long and 4-5 feet high every other day for trash pickup. I cannot understand how they will be able to assemble enough rolling bins of appropriate size to manage that volume of garbage, let alone get them in and out of their building's basement which has only a regular-sized fire door exit 12' below sidewalk grade with a flight of stairs up. And that's just one large apartment building in a city of 8.5 million people. Plus even on a good day (summer Sunday morning when the city is empty) access to the curb for one of these automated trash trucks is impossible.
Things that seem practical in other cities of the world can be logistical nightmares in NYC. And that's without cockatoos.
Brooklyn tried to do food waste recycling but the volume of food waste overwhelmed the provider of those services in 3 months.
The compost thing in the UES is great. It is a shame that a lot of folks didn’t want it in buildings so they delayed that. But I go to a street corner 2 blocks away. There are bins every couple of blocks. Up where I am these things are actually being used to the point that they have to empty them now every single day. If you don’t put your stuff in there by 8 PM it is probably going to be filled.
The real answer to your question is going to be when they finally get the courage to put the bins in like in Barcelona. Of course, that will require to get rid of a bunch of the free alternate side of the street parking. People will howl. I never understood why so much of our taxpayer dollars go to providing free parking to 20% or so of residents who own cars, but I am a cyclist who also doesn’t understand how a bunch of people from New Jersey and Westchester managed to get us to kill congestion pricing so they could take up our roads with 100 square foot cars with one driver and not pay for the use. But it will also solve a bunch of other problems that we cyclists have in this fine city.
The thing about the compost….half of the resulting gases goes to run the composting operation at those egg like buildings by the Kosciusko Bridge…the other half was supposed to be mixed in with regular LNG through the (now owned/called) PSEG system in Long Island but they never connected to it so that half of the methane is just burned off heating the atmosphere. Of course, if it was in landfill it would just all go into the atmosphere so I guess we are ahead of the game in a way.
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