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Bulky residual and commercial waste

Many objects and materials can be classified as bulky residual or commercial waste. But also in this case it is necessary to differentiate. The following sorting manual is intended to help you to decide what should go into bulky residual container and which materials should be disposed of in other ways.

Yes:

wood, cardboard, textiles, furniture, bicycles, household effects




No:

Materials with hazardous substances, insulation material containing asbestos, pressure vessels (gas flasks, PU cans), metal, glass, construction waste, used electrical and electronic appliances, oil, paint, chemicals

Mixed waste

Yes:

bonded wood and textile products, plastic parts and plastic aggregate, rubber, wood off-cuts, textile waste, plastic fibre waste, contaminated foil, contaminated cardboard and packaging, coated paper, carbon/carbonless copy paper, paper towels and napkins, wallpaper off-cuts, vacuum cleaner bags

No:

bio-waste and leftovers, packed food, loppings and leaves in large quantities, construction waste, bulky residual, electronic scrap, hazardous waste (paint, adhesives, neon tubes, batteries, car tyres), liquid, paste-like, dusty waste, medical waste, explosive material

Mixed waste to be disposed

("Wet" recyclable material mixture in which damp or wet waste wets the rest of the waste mixture.)

Yes:

mixture of materials that can neither be mechanically recycled nor used for energy recovery





No:

waste requiring particularly stringent oversight or material with hazardous contamination, insulation material with non-bonded asbestos, pressure vessels (gas flasks, PU cans), mineral waste, construction waste, human or animal excreta, animal cadavers, hospital waste (e.g. hypodermic needles)

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