Glamorgan Gazette

£2.3m recycling centre that has never opened

- LEWIS SMITH Local Democracy Reporter lewis.smith@reahplc.com

FRUSTRATIO­NS have been expressed over the delays in opening a £2.3m recycling centre.

The new recycling centre at Village Farm Industrial Estate in Pyle was first approved by Bridgend council in 2018, with a budget of £2.3m set to create an improved community recycling centre to replace the current site at Tythegston.

However, while the constructi­on of the site was completed more than two years ago, it has still remained unopened to the public, with council officers saying the delay has been caused because waste management group Kier, which runs waste facilities in Bridgend, has not been able to gain an operating licence from Natural Resources Wales.

The new recycling site is described as having a split-level design with drivers able to follow a one-way system, along with access to parking bays and recycling skips at ground level as well as bypass ramps that lead to high-sided skips on an upper level.

Once opened, plans say it will be capable of accommodat­ing up to 24 vehicles at a time, along with an additional onsite queuing capacity for another 72 vehicles.

While a council spokespers­on has said they hope to be able to announce news of its opening soon, with a potential date set for spring this year, the site remains empty and a definitive opening date has not been given.

Councillor Alex Williams, chair of the BCBC corporate overview and scrutiny committee, said given the money that had been spent, he hoped it would be opened as soon as possible for residents in the area to use.

He said: “The £2.3m investment in relocating the community recycling centre from Tythegston to Village Farm Industrial Estate in Pyle was given the go-ahead five years ago.

“Since then, we have been repeatedly assured that the new centre is very much still in the pipeline, two and a half years since the work was completed at the site.

“In June 2021, it was originally expected to open in late summer 2021. Then in June 2022, we heard that it was anticipate­d that it would open in 202223, with both sites being maintained until the new site was fully operationa­l.

“Now 18 months later, and after many years of going back and forth between BCBC, Kier, the Welsh Government and Natural Resources Wales on issues relating to the operator’s licence and environmen­tal permit, we are still not expecting the site to be open before spring 2024 at the earliest.

“Given the significan­t £2.3m expenditur­e on this community recycling centre, it is imperative that the site becomes fully operationa­l for the benefit of residents, and so that much-needed efficiency savings can be found during this troubling time of financial turbulence for the local authority where every penny counts if we are to retain essential public services.”

It comes just months after the local authority discussed saving measures aimed at tackling an annual budget overspend of around £10m, which included plans to close each of the borough’s three recycling centres for one day a week.

When asked why there had been a delay in the operating licence being awarded earlier this year, officers at a full council meeting said a previous applicatio­n had been withdrawn from operators Kier following requests from Natural Resources Wales for further informatio­n with regards to fire mitigation at the site.

They informed members that while a refreshed applicatio­n had now been submitted, there was a backlog of applicatio­ns with NRW, adding that the authority had also establishe­d a relationsh­ip with directors to make sure the applicatio­n was given due considerat­ion and not pushed to the back of the queue.

A council spokesman said: “The new £2.3m community recycling centre at Village Farm Industrial Estate in Pyle is complete and ready to open as soon as a licence has been granted to our waste partners Kier by Natural Resources Wales. Until we have received confirmati­on from Kier that this is in place, the Tythegston site will remain in use.

“Once open, the new recycling centre’s design will offer drivers a choice of accessing parking bays and recycling skips located on both the ground level and an upper deck.

“It will feature modern facilities designed to make a trip to the tip as easy and convenient as possible. These include an all-weather canopy on the higher level, flexible bollards to prevent accidental damage to vehicles, solar onsite lighting, kerb-free parking bays to enhance safety and remove potential trip hazards, and more.

“The new centre will be able to be used by up to 24 vehicles at a time while up to 72 additional vehicles queue on site. To ease congestion and further support the flow of traffic around both the recycling centre and Village Farm Industrial Estate, a dedicated turning lane has already been installed from the A48 onto Heol Mostyn along with new traffic lights and a safe crossing island.

“The new facility promises to be bigger, better and more accessible than the Tythegston site, and further plans are in place to establish a new re-use shop similar to the facility which is proving to be very popular at Maesteg community recycling centre.

“We hope to be in a position to confirm further details very soon.”

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Pyle recycling centre

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