Futures Forum: Carbon Visuals: visualising air pollution
A sister website is Real World Visuals:
Visualising Bristol's Waste
Bristol Waste Company is keen to engage directly with households about the benefits of waste and litter minimisation and recycling. Real World Visuals has created two films that show the actual volumes of litter, recycling and recycling opportunities. The goal of the project is to elicit a measurable increase in waste minimisation and recycling and provide direct cost benefits to the council.
This film shows the volume of litter collected from Bristol's street every day - 10 tonnes, and every year - 350,000 tonnes.
This film shows the volume of material recycled by households every week and annually. The film also shows the amount of material that is NOT recycled. - the wasted recycling opportunity for helping the environment and saving costs for the council.
We started the project with a data analysis and scoping process to determine different visual options, bearing in mind the launch of the initiative at the International Balloon Fiesta in August 2016 where Bristol Waste sponsors the Solar Balloon.
Because the event took place at the Ashton Court estate on the edge of Bristol, we decided to commission drone aerial photography of the estate as the background scene, rather than using a computer generated background.
Bristol Waste Company is the city’s local recycling, waste collection and street cleansing company. The company employs 450 people who make 17 million scheduled collections every year, operate 180 vehicles, collect 140,000 tonnes of waste and recycling per annum of which 53,000 tonnes is sent for composting or recycling. BWC cleans 800 miles of streets and footpaths and deals with 180,000 ad hoc job requests and service queries annually.
See more at www.bristolwastecompany.co.uk
All our images are licensed under Creative Commons and available to download on our Flickr page.
Visualising Bristol's Waste — Real World Visuals
See also:
Futures Forum: Saving the oceans from plastic pollution >>> Bring in a deposit scheme on plastic bottles
Futures Forum: Your takeaway coffee cup is not recyclable - really
Futures Forum: Recycling in East Devon: "at the cutting edge of environmental sustainability"
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