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‘Reuse It Yourself’ movement could revolutionise DIY

17th April, 2009 by Anonymous | Add a comment

DIY enthusiasts poised to reuse old building materials

Some “14 million tonnes” of unwanted building materials generated by the construction industry could be saved from being dumped in landfills in a new reclaim and resell scheme.

Under the new initiative, three ‘ReIY’ (Reuse It Yourself) centres will be piloted across the country – in Wirral, Waltham Forest and Tees Valley – offering a cheaper, greener alternative to DIY. Aimed at the SME building trade and DIY customers, the centres will stock good quality unused materials, such as timber, tiles, paving slabs and flooring, and resell them between 20% and 80% cheaper than their new equivalents.

Created by sustainability charity BioRegional – of BedZED eco-village fame – the first two centres are set to open in May 2009. Cara Whelan, Project Manager at BioRegional, said: “The construction industry is the single largest producer of waste in England, producing an estimated 120 million tonnes of waste per year. We calculate that 12%, or 14 million tonnes, can be reused.”

Funded by WRAP, an organisation helping businesses go green, BioRegional estimates that the ReIY scheme will enable a carbon saving of “around 500kg for every tonne of construction materials reused”.

Based on a successful US model, the scheme will be run on a social enterprise business model, with each centre creating “around four full time jobs and up to 100 volunteer placements or traineeships”. And if the pilot proves successful, the concept could be rolled out nationally: “The sky’s the limit! There are over 1,000 Travis Perkins [builders’ merchants] stores in the UK. If the idea takes off there could be a ReIY centre in every town,” enthused Whelan.

Forum for the Future’s Head of Built Environment, Martin Hunt, was fully supportive of the concept: “Anything that makes it easier to exchange and sell on unused building materials is a great idea, particularly for smaller businesses in the current economic climate.”– Rebecca Schischa

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Comments

Daniel Hill (not verified), 1 June 2009 - 09:51
  • reply

I have read your article with interest, in 2006 with my wife Charis I set up the UK's first Building material Reuse Centre. We named our business Tiger after our daughter. We are based in Brighton but we collect surplus materials from across the South East.

we are also currently working on a tv show for the Discovery Channel with Tommy Walsh from BBC Ground Force called fix your house for free where we have been asked to be the reclamation expert.

Check out our web site www.reuseitdontloseit.co.uk

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