Mooresville, North Carolina - 28115 Local Recycling Centers
Recycling Centers for Mooresville, North Carolina
Iredell County Transfer Station - Mooresville
158 Macleod Dr
Mooresville, NC 28117
Trash Unlimited
169 Cotton Wood Rd
Cleveland, NC 27013
L Gordon Iron & Metal
1300 Salisbury Rd
Statesville, NC 28625
North Mecklenburg Recycling Center
12300 Statesville Rd
Huntersville, NC 28078
Blackwelders Converter and Metal Recycling
776 Florence St
Concord, NC 28027
Iredell County Solid Waste-West Site
257 Watermelon Rd
Statesville, NC 28625
The Junkluggers of Charlotte
12086 University City Blvd
Harrisburg, NC 28075
Holmes Iron & Metal Inc Undo
629 N Long St
Salisbury, NC 28144
Top Price Recycling
114 E 28th St
Charlotte, NC 28206
Southern Resources
3826 Raleigh St
Charlotte, NC 28206
Davie County Solid Waste Recycling
360 Dalton Rd
Mocksville, NC 27028
Dr Junk
2512 Weddington Ave
Charlotte, NC 28204
Discount Ink Jet and Toner
410 E Franklin Blvd
Gastonia, NC 28054
A L Lowder
435 Willow St
Albemarle, NC 28001
-
About RecyclingCenters.org
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
RecyclingCenters.org exists to provide a resource for communities to find places to recycle a wide variety of products in their neighborhood.
-
Tips About Water Conservation
The best way by far to lower the planet's need for water is water conservation. Using less water has a chain reaction effect by using less energy for heating water and treating sewage. Using less water, especially hot water, also saves electricity which in turn saves water because the production of electricity itself uses a good deal of water.
-
How and Why would I Compost
You might want to compost if you need fertilizer for your garden or landscaping.
You might want to compost if you need fertilizer for your garden or landscaping. Compost is just as good or better than commericial fertilizers. It also doesn't cost anything to create compost because it's made with the organic waste you produce.
-
History of Recycling
Recycling
Recycling is a key component of modern waste reduction and is the third component of the "Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle" waste hierarchy.