2011 March | BigBelly Solar

Chicago Tribune: TO: You. FROM: Trash. SUBJECT: Empty me.

  • March 30, 2011 2:58 pm

The solar-powered “smart” trash can — called BigBelly — sends an email when it's full.

chicagotribune.com


Chicago, IL - With smartphones that can start your car and deposit a check into your bank account, it was only a matter of time before a trash can could send an email when it’s ready to be emptied.

The “smart cans” — called BigBelly — are solar-powered trash cans that have dotted Chicago streets since 2007 and are starting to pop up in the suburbs and throughout Illinois. The machines — about the size of a library book deposit bin — compact the trash, making room for five times more garbage and reducing the number of trips that trucks must make to empty the cans.

“It’s a happy mix of technology, waste collection and environmentalism,” said Bill Plunkett, spokesman for Waste Management Inc., which distributes the BigBelly cans.

Last week, Waste Management officials made a pitch to local officials in Will County, touting the benefits of not having trash flying around after concerts in the park (BigBelly has a cover), and no more wasteful trips to empty cans that are not even full.

“I just couldn’t believe the thing emails you and tells you it’s full,” said Marian Gibson, village administrator for south suburban Manhattan. “I was like, “Wow, there is so much technology.’”

So far, suburban Maywood and Elgin both have a BigBelly, and Macomb has six around its courthouse square. This spring, 11 more will be distributed among Orland Park, Elk Grove Village, Westmont and Antioch.

This month, Chicago ordered 400 BigBelly cans for the city’s high-traffic areas and joins major cities such as New York and Philadelphia in the BigBelly movement. [The machines also can include a bin for recyclables.]

See the Article

Iowa State University: Residence Halls Go Green With Garbage

  • March 28, 2011 4:02 pm

Live Green

A BigBelly solar compactor outside the library.


Ames, IA— The Iowa State University Department of Residence is helping the university fulfill two missions with just one initiative. As a way to both “Keep Iowa State Beautiful” and “Live Green,” the Department of Residence will soon add a total of 30 solar trash compactors to areas outside the residence halls and on campus apartments.

“The pilot installation of solar powered compactors on campus by our colleagues in Facilities Planning & Management has clearly demonstrated a great return, and we’re very excited to build on an already successful initiative,” said Pete Englin, Director of the Department of Residence. “We’ve learned that replacing trash receptacles with BigBelly compactors saves money, time, and encourages proper disposal of waste. Our interest in expanding this program around on campus living locations was shared with our student leaders and they were very much in favor.”

Iowa State University installed the first BigBelly solar trash compactor in the state of Iowa in 2009. The reviews for the device were so high that the university ordered 11 additional compactors in 2010. The move has saved the university time and money as the compactors need to be emptied just once per week by ISU Facilities, Planning, and Management (FP&M) staff as opposed to traditional trash receptacles, which are emptied once per day.

“BigBelly compactors have been a good addition for our trash management,” said Les Lawson, manager of campus services. “They have reduced our tipping frequencies, kept animals out of the trash, and best of all, students like to see and use them.”

Each compactor is equipped with a CLEAN wireless monitoring system that notifies FP&M staff when the compactors are ready to be emptied. According to an analysis compiled by Waste Management, the BigBelly compactors pay for themselves in roughly two and a half years through reduced labor and fuel costs.

See the Article

Read these related articles:

NeedhamPatch.com: Needham Business Puts Mark on Chicago

  • March 28, 2011 9:27 am

Needham Patch

A BigBelly solar compactor in Chicago

BigBelly Solar recently sold 400 of its solar-powered trash compactors to Chicago.

A local company, which got its start in Needham, will soon put its stamp on the Windy City.

BigBelly Solar recently made a deal with the city of Chicago to set up 400 of its solar-powered trash compactors, along with its adjacent recycling units and a wireless monitoring system, for $2.5 million. Under the agreement, the city, and related organizations, can buy up to 1,200 more in the future.

“Every intersection in (Chicago’s central business district) will become a BigBelly intersection,” said Richard Kennelly, the company’s vice president of marketing.

BigBelly was founded by inventor Jim Poss in Needham in 2003. The company’s headquarters then moved to a larger location on Wells Avenue in Newton last summer.

BigBelly solar compactor on Newbury Street in Boston

The BigBelly units, which resemble mailboxes, use the sun’s energy to compact the trash once it reaches a certain level. Once full, the units signal a central server to notify collectors.

The bins hold approximately five times as much as conventional trash cans, saving cities and towns up to 80 percent in collection costs and reducing fuel emissions from garbage trucks, according to the company. After Philadelphia installed 500 in 2009, the city saved about $900,000 in collection costs the following year, according to the company.

BigBelly Solar has steadily grown since 2003, and the trash compactors can now be found in 48 states and 30 countries, Kennelly said. Chicago joins not only Philadelphia but also Los Angeles, Houston, Denver, Seattle and Boston as major U.S. metropolitans that use the bins. Smaller cities, and even towns such as Lincoln and Lexington, as well as universities and parks, also have them, he said.

Poss, a Marblehead native, founded the company while earning his M.B.A. at Babson College.

See the Article

News Channel 7: Trash Cans Go Green In Western NC

  • March 25, 2011 1:26 pm

WSPA


Solar Trash Can Has A Green Touch

Asheville, NC - Did you ever think that throwing away your trash could be an easy way to help the environment? One city in Western North Carolina hopes a new type of garbage can will help keep the streets clean and green.

We’re here in Asheville where this trash compactor is powered by the sun. And also it lets you know when it’s filled up.

“So far, it’s cut down on our pickups from daily to once a week.”

It’s a new way to dump your trash and recycle at the same time.

“It will reduce our maintenance costs, it will reduce our fuel costs and it will reduce our manpower.”

This solar powered trash can and compactor at the Asheville public works building is already making a green impact.

“Gas, manpower, maintenance costs…it’s reduced it considerably.”

Chris Daniels with the public works department says the compactor cuts down on overflow and it doesn’t need any power to work.

“It charges itself and it will last three or four days without any sunshine. This is part of the compactor. It has a sensor in the interior of it. When the debris gets full in the container it will automatically compact it,” explains Daniels.

The new containers are on a test run in Asheville…and Daniels says the results are impressive.

“I have read a lot of reviews from other cities that have these in place and the cost savings are amazing.”

The solar powered trash and recycle bins also have indicator lights to let workers know when they are full.

“Red means it needs to be changed or emptied out.”

And eventually, these futuristic trash cans can even send a text message to let you know they’re full.

“It would be a great benefit to the city as far as cleanliness.”

The new trash can has been in place for the last two months with plans to add another one in the city later this year. Officials in other cities have seen savings near $50,000 from these types of cans.

[E.g., Philadelphia saved nearly $900,000 in the first year alone and expects savings of $13M over ten years from 500 BigBelly solar compactors and recycling units installed in 2009.]

Watch news reporter Justin Cooper’s story

Boston Business Journal: BigBelly scores largest ever order

  • March 21, 2011 2:06 pm

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Needham, MA – based solar trash compactor maker BigBelly Solar Inc. has landed its largest ever single contract – a $2.5 million order from the city of Chicago.

As part of a new litter abatement program in its downtown, Chicago, over the course of the contract, will install up to 1,600 BigBelly systems. Initially, the contract calls for installing 400 of the units in downtown, which BigBelly Vice President of Marketing Richard Kennelly calls the second-largest initial order for the company, behind the 500 initially purchased by the City of Philadelphia in 2009. That contract capped at 1,000 units with a 2010 purchase of an additional 500.

In February of 2010, BigBelly brought on board networking technology veteran Barry Fougere as chief operating officer. Fougere, former CEO of wireless networking equipment maker Colubris Networks Inc., came to BigBelly from Heidrick & Struggles, a Chicago-based executive search and professional services firm.

Venture-backed BigBelly raised $3.2 million in equity in May 2009. The investors in that round were not identified, but backers in BigBelly, which started life in 2003 as Seahorse Power Company Inc., include Massachusetts Green Energy Fund and Jim Gordon, president of Cape Wind Associates. Dan Goldman, current chief financial officer of GreatPoint Energy also contributed as an individual investor.

See the Article
See the Mass High Tech Article

COVER STORY Chicago Sun-Times: City signs $2.5 million deal for solar-powered trash compactors

  • March 7, 2011 9:41 am

Chicago Sun-Times cover story.

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By signing a contract with BigBelly Solar to provide up to 1,600 solar-powered trash compactors with wireless monitoring and companion recycling units, the City of Chicago has taken a major leap forward in transforming the way it manages public litter collection and a new recycling program in the downtown area. With its commitment announced this week to install the BigBelly intelligent waste collection system, the City will significantly reduce collection frequency and the related costs, truck traffic, fuel consumption and carbon emissions.  The initial business-district deployment will consist of 400 BigBelly trash and recycling kiosks.

A summary of the Sun-Times article follows, with links to read or download the entire article.

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Chicago, IL – Garbage collection on the streets of downtown Chicago is going solar and high-tech, thanks to a $2.5 million purchase that could redefine the term “Big Belly.”

The Daley administration has signed a contract with Massachusetts-based BigBelly Solar to provide at least 400 solar-powered trash compactors in the central business district, where pedestrian traffic is heaviest and trash bins need frequent pickups.

Each unit holds five times the garbage of a normal trash can and has its own built-in sensor that alerts the city when it’s full. There’s also an attached container for recyclables.

“This initiative will help the city continue providing services during these difficult economic times with our more limited personnel resources,” Streets and Sanitation spokesman Matt Smith wrote in an e-mail response to the Sun-Times.

“Benefits are both economic and environmental. Since units are solar-powered, they don’t need an external power source. They compact the trash, so Streets and Sanitation makes fewer trips to empty them. … Trucks are out less, use less fuel and produce less emissions.”

BigBelly Solar bills itself as the “world’s first integrated” system that uses “renewable power and information technology” to dramatically reduce refuse collection costs.

 

One of 400 BigBelly Solar waste & recycling stations in Chicago's system“The machine senses when trash reaches a certain level and triggers the compactor, which is powered by a solar-powered battery. There is also a separate container attached to the BigBelly that can accommodate recyclables,” Smith said.

“When the unit is full and needs emptying, it sends a notification to the city via an automated site. There is also a visible indicator on the machine to alert staff that it needs to be emptied.”

If the downtown experiment is half as successful as it’s been in Philadelphia, Chicago taxpayers could save a ton.

In 2009, Philadelphia was emptying the 700 conventional trash bins in its city center 17 times a week, with 33 employees working three shifts.

One year later — after installing 500 solar-powered compactors — collections had dropped to five times a week by nine employees working a single shift. That saved Philadelphia taxpayers $900,000 in the first year alone, company officials said.

“Wireless communications capability … allowed the city to better route and monitor vehicles and staff. Labor freed up by fewer required collections was used to staff the city’s expanding recycling program,” according to the company’s website.

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Print the Chicago Sun-Times Article

ProspectHeightsPatch: 20 Solar-Powered Trash Cans Coming to Flatbush Ave

  • March 1, 2011 11:50 am

Prospect Heights Patch


Brooklyn, NY – The future is coming to Flatbush Avenue – in the form of 20 brand-new, high-tech garbage cans.

Next year, the North Flatbush Business Improvement District plans to install 20 solar-powered, self-compacting trash cans to the avenue between Grand Army Plaza and Atlantic Avenue.

“Were trying to keep up with the times and go as green as possible,” said Sharon Davidson, executive director of the North Flatbush BID. “We also feel that economically it would help us with our trash removal – we have only one person to help us with our trash removal currently.”

The state-of-the-art trash bins can hold three to five times as much trash as regular garbage cans, meaning less overflowing garbage on the trash-plagued avenue.

Davidson said the move was at least in part due to anticipated crowds when the Barclay Center opens for the 2012-2013 basketball season.

The new receptacles will be installed thanks to capital funding given to the North Flatbush BID by Borough President Marty Markowitz. They will be installed as part of a face-lift for Flatbush Avenue.

Last week, Park Slope’s Fifth Avenue similarly installed six new BigBelly Solar trash cans on the avenue.

Residents were thrilled by the green idea.

“I’m a big fan of recycle, reduce, reuse,” said Jane Tomkiewicz, a Fifth Street resident who was passing by as the first solar-powered bin was installed on Fourth Street and Fifth Avenue. “I think this is awesome.”

See the Article
Read the related ParkSlopePatch Article or Watch the WNBC Video

WasteAdvantage Magazine: Thinking Outside the Bin

  • March 1, 2011 11:27 am

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Considering wireless monitoring and notification system for public compacting waste receptacles greens collection activity while saving plenty of green.

Knowledge is powerful.  And for those involved in vehicle-intensive operations, such as waste collection and parcel delivery services knowing exactly when you need to be and where helps minimize miles driven—saving time, fuel and money. Better knowledge leads to greater efficiency, and efficiency boils down to minimizing waste: making the most effective use of people and equipment to get the job done well at the lowest cost, without using more time than necessary. Efficiency helps both public and private sector entities improve environmental and operational performance while also improving the bottom line.

Field Intelligence
Many industries have complex systems in place to manage and predict the collection and delivery of goods and services. In the waste hauling business, stationary compactors have been equipped with automatic fullness sensing and reporting systems to great effect—rather than picking up containers on a schedule, which generally means collecting when the container still has room for more material; collections are done only when the containers are full. This efficiency gain represents a big time saver and allows haulers to optimize routes, providing service at lower cost.

However, for everyday trashcans on streets, in parks and other outdoor locations, there has been no information coming from the can itself—these are merely trashcans, with no ability to sense fullness, much less communicate that status to operations personnel. Crews tend to schedule collections based on past experience and average demand, typically erring on the side of picking up the trash too early in order to avoid overflows—which are not only unsightly, prompting citizen complaints and making otherwise beautiful places sullied and unattractive, but trash overflows also present public health hazards and require extra time from crews to pick up scattered litter.

Without knowing exactly when public trashcans are full, collecting too early necessarily involves collecting a lot of air—at the expense of time, and human and equipment resources to accomplish higher-value tasks.

A New Dawn for Smart Waste Receptacles
Evolving and benefiting from smart technologies in other fields, the humble waste receptacle on the street now has a bright new future. Cities, parks and universities across the U.S., Canada and in nearly 30 other countries are now using innovative technology that allows for real-time reporting from every waste receptacle in the field, viewable from any Web browser.

This new system is not just a better trashcan. Wireless communication system-wide, powered by solar energy, puts better information at the fingertips of operations managers to drive greater route and staff efficiency. Combining onsite, solar-powered compaction at the point of disposal, with wireless network capability and separation of recyclables, a powerful new, intelligent waste collection system is helping communities deliver critical services at lower cost.

Wireless Connectivity and Asset Monitoring/Management
The wireless monitoring software solution tracks all compaction and collection activity at each solar compactor in the field. Real-time access to bin fullness information supports operations that collect trash neither too early (wasted expense) nor too late (overflow litter). Optimizing collections allows waste collection teams to maintain high service levels, while dramatically reducing costs. Patterns of historical information allow customers to drive even deeper efficiencies by adjusting routes and staff dispatching patterns. Finally, real-time information ensures “no surprises” and allows the organization the flexibility to shift to prevent issues and address changing conditions on the ground (such as special events, seasonal usage, population or foot traffic growth areas, and weather-related fluctuations in bin usage).

How it Works
A mini “cell phone” in each solar compactor communicates bin-level information to a central network of servers. These servers process the information to present historical patterns, real time information, correlation with maps to visually depict information, and other useful operational data for purposes such as asset and personnel management.

Customer-specific information is viewable through a password-protected Internet portal, along with analysis and reporting capabilities and tools to support management decision making and actions.

What it Means
The wireless network monitoring and management software provides powerful, real-time and historical information to any manager or worker with an Internet-connected device. In constantly tracking collection activity and bin fullness levels, the system provides waste collection teams with the information required to better plan collection routes and pickups. Managers can direct pickups as required, streamline work processes, and more efficiently monitor assets and people. Imagine how much more efficient and flexible your operations could be if you knew the status of every trash bin, at all times, accessible from anywhere:

  • No wasted trips—pick up only when ready
  • Intelligent routing and dispatch—save on labor and fuel
  • Monitoring and maintenance—get to issues before the phone rings

This powerful software tool gathers historical data, delivers analysis of patterns of activity and provides management reporting. Collections personnel use this information to more efficiently plan collection routes and work zones, more seamlessly absorb “peak” activity without costly overtime and generally improve resource planning.  Citizens and visitors using the solar compactors appreciate the use of technology and renewable energy to make their communities cleaner and more efficient.  The system is educational, and engages people as they use the compactors to help foster more sustainable waste management and resource recovery practices. Together, operations personnel and users can begin to shift behavior to help promote a clean, litter-free and more sustainable community through better waste collection operations.

Moving Forward—With Smarter Systems
While many communities have stated laudable goals of moving toward zero waste, for the foreseeable future we will need to collect and transport materials (including recycling, compost and other recoverable materials) from the point of disposal to the next step in the process (be that a transfer station, MRF, compost heap, landfill or other facility).  So we need to make the collection and transportation part of the waste collection process as efficient as possible, to reduce costs, reduce fuel consumption and vehicle emissions, and to re-allocate the saved labor to other high-value tasks. Real-time knowledge of fullness and collection status from every receptacle in the network enables dramatic efficiency gains in waste collection now and as waste streams evolve going forward.

Facing budget pressures, private and public managers face the challenge of reducing operating costs without sacrificing service levels. The wireless network system provides the visibility to make sure that operations are planned and optimized to deliver on that challenge.

Spotlight case study: Philadelphia

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WIRELESSLY NETWORKED SOLAR-POWERED COMPACTORS PUT THE SQUEEZE ON TRASH AND RECYCLING COLLECTION COSTS IN PHILLY

Waste collection is an expensive and time-consuming business—and a necessity for public health and safety.

With demand for waste collection rising and city budgets shrinking, innovation is required. The City of  Philadelphia is leading the way with one such innovation. On April 30, 2009, Mayor Michael Nutter unveiled the first of 500 “BigBelly” solar-powered trash compactors and 210 companion single-stream recycling units to be installed throughout Center City Philadelphia.

The compactors are “smart” trash receptacles: equipped with the “CLEAN” (Collection Logistics Efficiency And Notification) software solution, whereas each unit sends a wireless signal to a central server where staff can see which machines are full, so managers can optimize collection routes in real-time based on data from every machine in the field. The solution is simple on the surface, but is powered by patented and proven third generation technology. By using solar power to compact waste at the point of collection, each solar compactor can hold about five times the amount of waste as a typical receptacle, eliminating the need for four out of five collection trips system wide. Network monitoring software provides the information required to drive deep efficiencies in deployment and management of assets and crews. The result is up to an 80 percent reduction in collection vehicle trips that consume large quantities of time and fuel, and divert valuable staff time from other priorities. All while maintaining or improving service levels.

The City of Philadelphia had been making 17 trips each week to empty 700 wire baskets throughout Center City, at an annual cost of about $2.3 million. After replacing those 700 receptacles with 500 solarpowered compactors and 210 recycling units, the City collects only five times a week, and last summer reported savings of about $850,000 in the first year alone. Performing those 17 collections each week required 33 workers on three shifts, while performing the five collections per week under the new program requires only nine workers on a single shift. The other workers have been re-assigned to an expanded recycling collection program, providing further waste disposal savings for the City. Highlights of the program include:

  • Immediate savings: By entering into a three-year financing arrangement, the City has no up-front capital cost and will realize collection cost savings in the first year of approximately $850,000—with cumulative savings of $13 million expected over ten years.
  • Asset monitoring and management: The Streets Department can manage assets all across Center City, obtaining valuable and actionable information from any Web browser, at any time.
  • Expanded recycling: This initiative introduced street-level recycling for the first time in Philadelphia, providing greater savings while promoting sustainability.

In conjunction with the installation of the wirelessly networked trash compactors, the City introduced public space recycling for the very first time in Philadelphia. Mayor Nutter simultaneously launched a major public relations and neighborhood education campaign called “Philly Throws Green”(www.phillythrowsgreen.org). This program is part of the Mayor’s broader initiative called “Greenworks Philadelphia” (www.greenworksphila.org), the new comprehensive sustainability framework designed to help the City meet its proclaimed goal of becoming “America’s number one green city.”

Mayor Nutter, on unveiling the new system, declared, “This technology will save taxpayers money, introduce sidewalk recycling and keep our streets clean. This is one more important step towards achieving our sustainability goals.”

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Breakthroughs and Innovations

The BigBelly Solar (Newton, MA) intelligent waste collection system combines solar-powered trash compaction, efficient recycling solutions, and network monitoring and management software into a powerful  approach that enables municipalities, colleges and universities, government facilities and other institutional customers to reduce the operating costs associated with collection by up to 80 percent. In times when customers are looking for ways to maintain required levels of service while wrestling with tightening budgets, the patented BigBelly Solar intelligent waste collection system is a compelling answer.

BigBelly solar compactors automatically compact trash to eliminate four out of five collection trips, reducing fuel use and emissions, while allowing the productive redeployment of labor to recycling and other critical services. The BigBelly system can provide immediate cash flow savings. Enclosed design keeps litter in, pests out. Wireless network monitoring and management system available. Made in USA.

BigBelly Solar is also enabling more than 750 customers in nearly every state and 30 other countries to become visible leaders in practices that are more environmentally sustainable—displacing fossil fuel usage through renewable energy, increasing recycling rates and reducing cross contamination, reducing litter and associated public health concerns, and creating a messaging platform to engage users and influence more environmentally-conscious behaviors.

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