This is the kind of downsizing we can all cheer about. PNC has launched an effort to reduce the amount of waste coming out of its downtown Cleveland office building to "near zero," becoming one of the first downtown buildings to achieve this ambitious goal.
The employee-led effort is reducing the amount of trash going to landfills to 40 percent of the total waste coming out of the building. The remaining 60 percent is being recycled or composted. PNC is not stopping at this laudable goal, and has made a commitment to reduce its waste by 90 percent, hopefully by this summer.
"We wanted PNC's offices to be among the first near-zero buildings in downtown," says Paul Clark, Regional Vice President for PNC Bank. "This is a local application of the sincerity of PNC's commitment to green building."
To achieve its goal, PNC designated an employee "green ambassador" on every floor of its downtown building. The company also removed common area trash cans, replacing them with quart-sized containers at employee desks. A partnership with Brooklyn-based Rosby's Resource Recycling allows PNC to recycle organic materials, which are composted into mulch for gardens.
"The change in my life only took about two minutes, and I also get a little exercise on my way to compost bin," quips Clark. "The other side of change is fabulous."
Benson Gabler, Manager of Corporate Sustainability for PNC, adds that Cleveland's near zero program takes the company's sustainability efforts to a new level that he hopes to widely replicate. "We'd already been looking at waste reduction in all PNC buildings, yet Cleveland has composting on every floor, and that's new. This is something we'd like to roll out at other locations."
Click here to check out a Youtube video about PNC going green in Cleveland.
Source: Paul Clark, Benson Gabler
Writer: Lee Chilcote