The Transfer Station

What is it?

Up until the early 1990s, most regions around the country still had local “dumps” where the community’s waste was taken. Due to concerns about public health and the environment, as well as increasing regulations, most of these local landfills began to close.

As communities struggled to figure out what to do with their waste, large waste management companies began construction of “mega-landfills” in remote locations designed to accept waste from hundreds of miles away. This new system created a new challenge — how could waste picked up by small, local garbage trucks be transported over such long distances?

The solution from local residents and businesses was to build transfer stations where waste from local garbage haulers and citizens could be processed and reloaded onto long-haul trucks, freight trains and even barges, in some instances. The Portland region’s waste is trucked 150 miles to the 2,000-acre Columbia Ridge Landfill in eastern Oregon. While we can be very proud of our high diversion rate, we still send more than 2.4 million tons of waste to landfills each year. (Ouch!)

 

 

2018 Press

stories

The Oregonian, Art Picks, Aug. 2, 2018

13 things to see and do in Portland: August 2018, Portland Monthly Magazine 

Latest GLEAN exhibit opens this Friday, Green Tip, KINK Radio  

GLEAN artists work through the weight of waste, Reclamation Administration

Materials for a masterpiece, Resource Recycling website

Trash Art, Listening to the stories our trash tells, Radicle magazine, annual publication of Pacific Northwest College of Art

ARTIST FEATUREs

Get ‘trashy’ with Hillsboro artist, Feature on Eduardo Cruz Torres, Hillsboro Tribune 

One man’s trash, Wilsonville artist displays art made from disposable materials in show focused on humanity’s wastefulness, Feature on Benjamin Mefford, Wilsonville Spokesman

Watch artists at work with our artist demos, Eduardo Cruz Torres, Wilsonville Festival of Arts, 2018