March 2008

  • 1
  • 2

A Closer Look at the Puente Hills MRF

This county facility is geared for the future.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Lynn Merrill

Comments

At the foot of the western slope of the second-largest landfill in the US, nestled in an industrial area and adjacent to a busy rail line, sits the future for Los Angeles County’s solid waste management needs. While other area material recovery facilities (MRFs) operate at near capacity, like a sleeping giant, the Puente Hills Material Recover Facility is gearing up for a future of 4,400-ton-per-day recyclables processing and rail-hauled solid waste.

The Puente Hills Landfill, located in the City of Industry, originally opened in 1957 and was acquired by the Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County in 1970. As the county grew, the districts began planning for new disposal capacity and ran smack into the NIMBY syndrome. 

“Earlier in the ’80s we had tried to permit six different landfills in county, and that was unsuccessful,” states John Cosulich, supervising engineer and the districts’ project engineer for the MRF. “They basically got shot down one by one. [The planning for the MRF] started back in 1988. At the time, the board of directors wanted us to take all of the waste out of the basin on a train. It was a long-planned activity.”

According to Cosulich, the decision to site the facility adjacent to the Puente Hills Landfill grew out of a variety of factors. “We’re kind of at the northeastern end of most of the waste shed. Puente Hills takes about a third of Los Angeles County’s waste, so this is a cornerstone facility. We had the availability of land at the bottom of the landfill. We bought an additional 17-acre parcel so that we could have enough land for a MRF, and we knew we had the rail access right across the street.”

Habib Kharrat, supervising engineer for the Puente Hills MRF as well as two other facilities owned by the districts, emphasizes the value of the location. “The fact that you have 13,000 tons coming into this facility at the Puente Hills Landfill that will not be available anymore [when the landfill closes] for the adjacent residents or the waste shed, like John mentioned, you’d think you’d want to capture at least part of that. The Puente Hills MRF, which is a 4,000-ton-per-day facility, will capture that within this area and keep it here. So in addition to having the land and the proximity to the rail, it’s again the location.”

Pushing the districts even more toward the reality of waste-by-rail is the looming closure of the landfill itself in 2013. “There’s been more push by the regulators to help waste-by-rail,” says Kharrat. “They actually wrote it in the latest CUP issued by the county for the Puente Hills Landfill, which is requiring deadlines for waste by rail to be implemented. If not, the Puente Hills will be penalized by reducing the amount of tonnage allowed to the landfill. Obviously, we had the foresight before the permit in 2003 to start up a MRF, but even more so it confirmed what we had planned by putting a requirement of closure in 2013 and putting these requirements in the CUP to get waste by rail going.”

Advertisement

Construction of the site required a significant amount of dirt movement to make this plot buildable. “We moved 2 million cubic yards in a project called the lower western cut,” says Cosulich. “We used that soil for cover for the landfill, so it was a win-win situation. But this land was not buildable initially, because it was a landslide. If we had a major earthquake, theoretically we could have had an engulfment issue. The Department of Public Works wouldn’t have issued a building permit for this site if we didn't move that earth.”

Final design of the MRF commenced in 2000, and the facility opened in July 2005. In designing the MRF, the districts built on the design lessons of others. “We were looking at a complete transfer and recycling facility,” says Cosulich. “In touring and interviewing MRF operators, we realized that the bigger you made the building, the more recycling you can do. Most every transfer station and recycling facility we went to, they said we wish we had more land and bigger space. With that in mind, and as a public agency in our dedication to recycling, we did size a very large facility. We have 215,000 square feet under roof. The basic box is 750 feet long by 300 feet wide. That’s a clear span. We decided to make a very large building so that we could do a lot of recycling with 4,000 tons per day.” Next Page >

  • 1
  • 2

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get MSW Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our MSW email newsletter!