Wembley Stadium waste recycled for use in urban park

Published by Jon Land for 24dash.com in Environment , Local Government
Wednesday 14th May 2008 - 9:25am

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Wembley Stadium waste recycled for use in urban parkWembley Stadium waste recycled for use in urban park

Waste material from building Wembley Stadium has been turned into four giant mounds in an urban park.

Around a million tons of rubble, clay and soil dug up during the demolition of the old Wembley and the building of the new stadium would usually have been dumped on a landfill site.

But much of the waste from both Wembley, and other major construction projects in London, was instead recycled.

Builders carried 60,000 lorry loads of material  to a site near the A40 just outside London.

The busy main road carries thousands of cars a day to Oxford and Birmingham but the noise was a blight on nearby towns - until now.

The four mounds, which are up to 22 metres tall, block much of the noise from the road, and are also part of a recreation park built on old wasteland.

And because Ealing Council charged up to £90 per truck to dump the waste the project cost taxpayers absolutely nothing.

Named Northala fields, it contains the small hills - which look like small tors - fishing lakes and a small area of woodland.

As builders had to carry the waste material a short distance rather than carting it to landfill sites, the project is also eco-friendly.

Architect Peter Fink, from Form Associates, which designed the project said he wanted to build a "multi-layered recreation area" and "urban fishery".


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