Why a recycling centre cannot be described only as "waste recovery"

Recycling construction waste makes sense from a circular economy perspective. Concrete, bricks, aggregate, asphalt mixes, or mixed construction waste can be reprocessed into recyclate. From the surroundings' perspective, however, it is not just an "environmental service". Real operation means material intake, movement of heavy goods vehicles, loading, tipping, crushing, sorting, storage of fractions, and dispatch of finished recyclate.

These activities are typically sources of noise, dust, and traffic load. For recycling centres, it is therefore important to assess not only annual capacity but also daily operating regime, location of technologies, distance from residential development, traffic connections, prevailing wind direction, and dust reduction methods.

For a recycling centre, capacity alone usually does not decide the outcome. Equally important is where crushing will take place, which routes trucks will use, how wetting will be arranged, and how close protected outdoor areas of buildings are.

Crushing and sorting as main technological sources

The most significant technological operations are usually crushing and sorting. Crushing is acoustically prominent especially due to the crusher itself, material impacts, loader operation, and handling of bulky construction waste. Sorting is associated with screen vibrations, transfers, conveyors, and movement of material between fractions.

At a smaller centre, this may be a mobile crusher and screen operated only a few days per month. At a larger site, technology may be fixed and operation almost daily. These two regimes are assessed differently from the perspective of noise and dust.

Part of operationMain impactWhat needs to be known
crushernoise, dust, material vibrationsequipment type, sound power, operating hours, location
screennoise, dust from transfersnumber of fractions, transfer height, wetting
conveyorslocal dust, transfersenclosure, drop height, wind direction
stockpilessecondary dustheight, location, material moisture
loadernoise, emissions, dusttravel route, working time, machine type
heavy goods trafficnoise and traffic immissionsnumber of trips, route, road surface

Practically important: in a noise study, sound power of equipment and operating time are decisive. In a dispersion study, capacity, material type, dustiness of operations, and effectiveness of measures such as wetting or enclosure are essential.

Dust: not just a visible dust cloud

Dust at construction waste sites is highly variable. Dry concrete behaves differently from brick, asphalt, mixed construction waste, or moist excavation material. Greatest dust often arises during tipping, crushing, sorting, transfers, vehicle movement on unpaved surfaces, and handling of dry fine fractions.

Visible dust is only part of the problem. Coarse particles settle quickly, while finer particles can spread further into the surroundings. In a dispersion study, total suspended particulates and their contribution to the immission situation in the surroundings are usually assessed.

Dust is in practice limited by a combination of technical and organisational measures:

MeasurePractical significance
material wettingreduces dust during crushing, sorting, and handling
paved roadslimits secondary dust from vehicle traffic
cleaning of site roadsreduces dust spread within and outside the site
limiting transfer heightreduces dust cloud formation
enclosure of conveyors and transferslimits dust escape in the process
storage of fine fractions in boxeslimits wind carry-off
speed limits for vehiclesreduces secondary dust on roads

For sources under the air protection regime, reducing total suspended particulate emissions applies not only to the crusher. Measures should also cover sorting, storage, material transport, handling areas, and traffic routes.

Loading, handling, and storage

Loading is sometimes underestimated because the crusher is regarded as the main technology. In practice, however, the loader can be one of the most significant sources of noise, dust, and operational movement in the site. Its route, tipping height, number of cycles, and location of stockpiles significantly affect study results.

Storage of recyclate and incoming waste should be designed to minimise dust entrainment and unnecessary vehicle movements. Logical site layout helps: waste intake, area for incoming material, crushing and sorting, storage of finished fractions, and dispatch. If these parts are mixed, the number of crossings, noise, and dust increase.

Good layout often reduces impacts more than retrofit measures. Placing the crusher behind a hall, behind an embankment, behind a stockpile, or at greater distance from residential development can be decisive for noise. For dust, storing fine fractions away from the upwind edge of the site helps.

Traffic: number of trips is as important as technology

Traffic is one of the main topics at recycling centres. Not only the site itself is addressed, but also access routes, passage through villages, road connections, intersection load, dust from roads, and noise from heavy goods vehicles.

For studies, it is necessary to know not only annual capacity but also daily intensity. An annual figure of 50,000 tonnes may look acceptable, but if a significant share of material arrives in a short season or in campaigns, actual daily load can be substantially higher.

Traffic dataWhy it matters
annual capacitybasic data for permitting, EIA, and waste regime
daily maximumdetermines noise and traffic load on busiest days
number of HGV trips per dayinput for noise and dispersion studies
transport routedetermines which residential buildings will be affected
road typeaffects noise, dust, and safety
operating regimedifference between year-round and campaign operation

For traffic, it is advisable to distinguish waste intake and recyclate dispatch. Sometimes it is assumed that a vehicle brings waste and takes away recyclate, but in real operation this may not always apply. For calculation, it is better to work with a conservative but substantiated scenario.

Noise study

A noise study assesses whether recycling centre operation will comply with hygienic noise limits in protected outdoor areas of buildings and in protected outdoor areas. At recycling sites, a combination of stationary sources and traffic is usually assessed: crusher, screen, loader, handling, tipping points, vehicle reversing, and passage of heavy goods vehicles.

Noise is often a limiting factor especially where residential development is close to the site or the traffic route passes through a village. For crushing, technology location and operating time are essential. For traffic, number of trips, speed, road surface, and distance from protected objects decide.

A noise study should clearly show:

  • which sources were included,
  • what operating hours were assumed,
  • where the nearest protected areas are,
  • what the contribution of technology and traffic is,
  • whether noise control measures are proposed,
  • whether operation is limited to daytime.

For recycling centres, organisational measures are often proposed: daytime operation only, placing the crusher as far as possible from residential development, use of earth embankments or stockpiles as partial screening, limiting reversing alarms to a suitable type, and excluding the noisiest activities at the edges of the day.

Dispersion study

A dispersion study assesses the project's contribution to air pollution. At recycling centres, dust from handling, crushing, sorting, storage, and vehicle traffic is usually addressed. If combustion sources are present in the site, for example diesel machines or backup generators, fuel combustion emissions may also enter the calculation.

A dispersion study is important especially where the site is close to residential development, high capacity is expected, dry dusty materials are involved, or the project is in an area with worse immission conditions. It does not assess only "dust from the crusher" but the entire operational system.

Dust sourceTypical method of consideration
crushingemission factor, operating hours, wetting effectiveness
sortingtransfers, screens, conveyors
stockpileswind carry-off and handling
loading and unloadingnumber of handling cycles
site vehicle trafficroute length, surface, speed, cleaning
heavy goods traffictraffic intensity and connecting roads

Dispersion study results may lead to operational adjustments: paving surfaces, wetting, enclosure, speed limits, relocation of technologies, or reduction of daily capacity. The study should therefore not be merely a formal annex but a practical tool for setting operating conditions.

EIA and screening procedure

For a construction waste recycling centre, it is necessary to verify whether the project falls under the Environmental Impact Assessment Act regime. For facilities for recovery of other waste, Annex 1 to Act No. 100/2001 Coll. states a capacity of 2,500 t/year as the limit for Category II, i.e. screening procedure.

Screening procedure does not automatically mean full EIA. It means the competent authority assesses the project notification and decides whether the project will be further assessed. For recycling centres, the outcome is strongly influenced by how well main impacts and proposed measures are described.

DocumentationWhat it should demonstrate
project notificationdescription of capacity, technology, location, and impacts
noise studyimpact of crushing, sorting, loading, and traffic
dispersion studydust and immission contribution of the project
traffic datanumber of HGV trips, routes, daily maxima
operational measureswetting, cleaning, speed limits, operating hours
waste regimewaste types, capacities, recovery method

For sub-threshold projects, the situation may be more complex. Even if a project does not reach the 2,500 t/year limit, it may be advisable to assess its impacts, especially in a sensitive location, near residential development, or where it cumulates with other operations. For changes to existing sites, capacity increase, technology change, and change in operating method are also assessed.

Air protection and listed source

Construction material recycling lines may also fall under the air protection regime as a listed stationary source. For code 5.11, construction material recycling lines with total designed capacity of 25 m³ per day or more are addressed. In such cases, not only the operating permit but also technical conditions focused on reducing total suspended particulate emissions are important.

In practice, this means the source must have dust control measures at process nodes, storage, and material transport. It is therefore not enough to state that equipment "will be wetted as needed". Measures must be specific and verifiable: where wetting will take place, when roads will be cleaned, how speed will be limited, how fine fractions will be stored, and how operation will proceed in dry and windy weather.

Most common mistakes in project preparation

At recycling centres, daily maximum operation is often underestimated. The project states annual capacity, but studies then need to know how many vehicles arrive per day, how many hours the crusher will run, and how long the loader will work. Without these data, noise and dispersion studies are uncertain.

A second common mistake is a general description of measures. Formulations such as "wetting will be carried out" or "operational discipline will be maintained" may not suffice if it is unclear where, when, and how measures will be applied. For noise, the problem is often that specific acoustic power of crusher and screen is not used, but only a general estimate.

A third problem is traffic. If the number of trips is underestimated or the actual route through a village is not described, comments may appear only in screening procedure or during subsequent permitting.

How to prepare a project so it holds up

A well-prepared project should link technology, capacity, traffic, and measures into one comprehensible operational scenario. Authorities and the public must be clear about what will be done in the site, how often, with what material, and how impacts on the surroundings will be limited.

Basic data for preparation are especially annual and daily capacity, types of waste accepted, crusher and screen type, operating hours, number of heavy goods vehicles, transport routes, location of stockpiles, wetting, paving of surfaces, road cleaning, and distance to nearest residential development.

The more precisely these data are described at the outset, the lower the risk of additional requirements, rework of studies, or conflicts in screening procedure.

Summary

A construction waste recycling centre is an operation where waste management, air protection, noise, traffic, and often EIA meet. Main impacts arise not only during crushing but also during sorting, loading, storage, transfers, and movement of heavy goods vehicles.

For permitting, it is important to set capacity, operating regime, daily traffic intensity, dust control measures, and noise protection correctly. For projects from 2,500 t/year recovery of other waste, screening procedure under the EIA Act must be expected. For construction material recycling lines from 25 m³/day, the listed stationary source regime under air protection must also be addressed.

Send us a project description, expected capacities, waste types, crusher and screen type, site map, transport route, and distance to nearest residential development. We will propose a suitable procedure for noise study, dispersion study, EIA notification, screening procedure, and permitting documentation for the recycling centre.

Factual basis of the article

The article is based mainly on these regulations:

Decree No. 415/2012 Coll. lists construction material recycling lines with total designed capacity of 25 m³ per day or more under code 5.11 and sets technical conditions for reducing total suspended particulate emissions at process nodes, during storage, and during material transport. Act No. 100/2001 Coll. includes facilities for recovery of other waste with capacity from 2,500 t/year among Category II projects subject to screening procedure.