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Thursday, 17th May, 2012

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Recycling goes underground in award-winning Ballinahown

Recycling has gone underground in Ballinahown in yet another major first for the award-winning village.

A new state-of-art underground system of bring banks, the first of its kind in Ireland, has been installed in the picturesque area this week and was officially launched on Tuesday by Westmeath County Manager Danny McLoughlin.

Gone are the unsightly, unwieldly traditional bottle banks with the associated problems of flytipping, poor odour and vermin and instead, in their place are small, sleek bins above the ground and a deep receptacle below the ground encased in a pre-cast concrete.

In an innovative use of computer technology, the system sends an email and text to the local authority, waste collector and local community to alert them when the bin is nearing capacity and needs collection. This backers believe this will end ongoing problems with overflowing bring banks nationwide and waste being dumped beside the facilities.

Athlone man Eamon Minagh is the sole agent in Ireland for Sulo, a German company which manufactures the innovative waste collection system. Speaking to the Offaly Independent this week, he said he was delighted Ballinahown was the first to boast the progressive facility in the country.

'The whole plan is the aesthetics of the bottle bank is greatly improved,' Mr Minagh said. 'It"s neat, tidy, clean and vermin proof. Everything is underground. The receptacle for say, glass is just a metre above the ground so the elderly and young people can access them now.'

A partnership process, the underground bring bank system has been funded and supported by Sulo, MMKA Engineers and Architects, Ballinahown Community Development and Westmeath Community Development. It is situated adjacent to Ballinahown NS on a once derelict site developed by Ballinahown Community Development in recent months in to a landscaped parkland setting.

Helen Conneely, Chairperson of Ballinahown Community Development hailed the development this week as a fantastic use of innovative, progressive technology in their ongoing Tidy Towns effort.

'One of the new areas within the Tidy Towns competition is waste minimisation. So instead, of just concentrating on the visual they have moved to encourage communities to do more sustainable elements. Last year we did our composting bins so this year we are addressing the waste side.'

She said the traditional bottle or bring banks had posed major problems for the group with waste being left beside them on a regular basis necessitating the group having to clean up glass and other waste, a situation that ends with the new system. The group believes many other areas will follow their lead working in partnership with the agencies to develop this technology when they see the benefits.

'The fact that the bins are all underground, they are of higher volume than the traditional and only collected when they are actually full is a huge advancement. It was a partnership with everyone to get something totally new and it"s the first of its kind in place in Ireland,' she enthused.

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