CSB9 - Remediation of a Former Landfill in Coventry: A Practical Application of the Definition of Waste: Development Industry Code of Practice in a Cluster Project.
This bulletin was written by VertaseFLI and describes the successful application of the Definition of Waste: Development Industry Code of Practice in a Cluster arrangement at a former landfill in Coventry. To provide background and context, the bulletin introduces the key aspects of this Code of Practice to help explain the decisions that were made at the site. The success of this project can be largely attributed to the careful management and organisation of all the stakeholders involved which was aided by an overriding consensus that the principles of the Cluster arrangement were fundamentally right and that it would yield financial and environmental benefits. The stakeholders were Coventry City Council as a client, their consultant, a consortium of three different house builders, the consortium's consultant, the local authority contaminated land officer, and three different sections of the Environment Agency.
Benefits of the project included less traffic congestion on outer roads, less visual and noise pollution via a vastly reduced number of lorry kilometres travelled, reduced use of primary aggregates, and reduced use of valuable landfill void space. Of particular note was the better quality assurance provided on the use of imported soils. Whilst it was always envisaged that the anticipated environmental and financial benefits of operating a Cluster arrangement on the project would be significant, actual reductions of approximately 80% for CO2 emissions, haulage distance and fuel use, and landfill disposal and import cost savings of £1,490,000, were more than anyone expected.