
We're embarking on a long overdue attic clean-out which includes some remnant boxes with nothing but lots of big, chunky pieces of styrofoam. As we all head into the gift giving season there will be a huge societal surge in styrofoam waste. It feels awful to just throw this stuff into the trash. We did a little poking around to see if the city of Boston accepts styrofoam for recycling..

Styrofoam is polystyrene (#6) and while #6 is listed on the City of Boston's acceptable recyclables, a call to the the Boston recycling department revealed that they do not accept styrofoam packaging for recycling. Uggg.

It is easy to recycle the styrofoam packaging peanuts. Just bring them to a local shipping store (e.g. UPS, Mailboxes Etc.) and they will reuse them. And when it comes to the big styrofoam packaging chunks, clearly the smartest thing to do is to buy appliances, electronics, and computers secondhand so that you don't have to deal with packaging. But when you do buy things new, what do YOU do with the big packaging chunks? Have you figured out alternative uses for this packaging (e.g. crafting) or have you found an esoteric recycling option?

Image 1: Travis Brown's flickr photostream
Image 2: Amit Gupta's flickr photostream
Image 3: markopolo8309's flickr photostream
Image 4: magnusw's flickr photostream
Unfortunately I usually just throw my out. I notice some companies have started using formed molds out of a pulp mixture that is recyclable in electronics at least.
That first picture makes me want to build a giant Styrofoam maze in my basement.
view buffalogirl's profile
Buying second hand certainly doesn't guarantee that you're not going to get styrofoam packaging - Many of the items I purchase on eBay get wrapped and packed w/ styrofoam sheets or peanuts.
Fortunately, San Francisco accepts styrofoam for recycling:
http://www.sfrecycling.com/residential/garbage.php?t=r
view bepsf's profile
I usually save and reuse it for stuff I sell on Ebay. That goes for peanuts and those "bags of air" as well. Sometimes I just have too much, so I will drop off a bag of peanuts at my local UPS store. Most of the air bags that I have gotten are recyclable, so I just pop them and throw them in the recycling bin.
view jyw's profile
I had a ton of foam peanuts and large boxes. I put a 'free' post on craigslist and they were gone within the hour.
view arroyo's profile
I save mine for in case I'm going to need to repack the item for a safe move. Eventually, I don't move, or the item has become so I don't worry if it gets jostled. Or it has died. Then I just throw it away. It helps that I don't buy a lot of things that use styrofoam to pack it up. I'm also in kind of an emergency clutter/decluttering situation, so I'd rather it get out of here with a quick decision than to pile and store things to figure out what else to do with them. I need to make room for myself and so what if I'm going to hell. My mental well-being has no room for guilt over styrofoam right now.
view K T G's profile
Did you also know the paper-recycle truck won't accept pizza boxes?
Just FYI.
view K T G's profile
I thought that first photo was giant sugar cubes (I thought I'd clicked over into the kitchn, but got lost).
That last photo makes me wonder if styrofoam is sound absorbent so I could start gluing it to my ceiling to deaden noise from the upstairs traffic (the family of billygoats who lives upstairs).
view OneWallKitchen's profile
Where I live (Alexandria City, Va), neither foam nor plastic bags can be recycled in our recycling bins. I end up throwing it out; I typically use newspapers for packing.
Thankfully, though, it seems like a lot of companies (including, I believe, amazon.com) have got with the program and are using greener packing materials.
view david's profile
Here in Austin the city doesn't accept styrofoam for recycling. But a local plastics recycler, Cycled Plastics (http://www.cycledplastics.com/), does. They're open regular business hours, and accept clean styrofoam for recycling, as well as some other plastics. Drop off is simple and usually takes no more than a few minutes.
view elmcclell's profile
My city in the Sacramento Valley has started a program to recycle the styrofoam packaging. It is great. They compress it in a special machine and it can be moved on for reuse.
So, I take papers, cardboard, bottles, plastic and now styrofoam every couple of weeks to the big bins.
PS The by-product is that selling the recyclables helps keep a bit of control on our Solid Waste charges too.
view frnd4vr's profile
David: If there are any in your area, Safeway and Walmart have a bin for recycling plastic bags.
view sagekitten85's profile
i can't use up all the accumulated styrofoam this way, but come spring, i plant lots of flowerpots and windowboxes. peanuts and styrofoam at the bottom are great for drainage to prevent root rot, and don't contibute to the weight like broken terra cotta pieces do.
view schlex's profile
one of the furniture companies that my store does business with actually encourages the retailers to bring the cardboard and styrofoam back so they can recycle it.
view gabriel_s's profile
A lot of "styrofoam" packing is now made with biodegradable material - witness EarthShell.
In addition, some bacteria can eat styrofoam, if we prepare it to their liking.
view Noe's profile
No styrofoam in the first pic, though? It was solid enough to climb on and a quite different texture
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/whiteread/default.shtm
view Lesley - London's profile
I use the paypal note field when I buy stuff on ebay and ask the seller to please use no packaging (often possible if I am buying books, etc.) or recyclable or biodegradable packaging like newspapers. Most will do that.
In my area supermarkets have bins for recycling plastic bags. I don't get plastic bags at the supermarket, but lots of stuff comes in plastic bags like some breads, so I save those and leave them in the supermarket bins.
view KarenAnne's profile
DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME FOLKS.
Yes, the Cubist/Constructivist/Deathstar aesthetic of styrofoam packing forms is cool, and I've always thought that, stacked up high & spotlit in a Modernist all-white interior, the stuff would make for a great fake Louise Nevelson sculpture, not to mention that covering the walls & ceriling with a collage of used packing forms (as seen in the dressing room above) would be an effective--and handsome--way to create an acoustsically dead room in an otherwise noisy environment. Unfortunately, it's also a fast & effective way to kill your friends & family.
The styrofoam used for packaging (i.e., cool molded forms & peanuts)--is both fast-burning & incredibly toxic--I believe that massive amounts of cyanide gas are one of the byproducts of burning the stuff--which is why building codes require styrofoam to be isolated with a double layer of Gypsum Board when it's used as building insulation. The terrible fire at The Station nightclub during an appearance by Great White a few years ago was made far worse by clueless doofuses who had used regular styrofoam packaging on the ceiling as a cheap (and illegal) substitute for code-approved fire-retardent sound baffling. I'm all for using everyday materials in novel ways but not when they put lives at risk. This is a bad idea all around.
Magnaverde.
Here's an article from Argonne National Laboratory & the Department of Energy.
http://74.125.95.132/search?q=cache:lcTG2Y3yNz4J:www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/eng99/eng99261.htm %22untreated polystyrene foam is dangerously flammable%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us
view magnaverde's profile
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view lisap's profile
anyone into stamping fabric or printmaking? Styrofoam makes an AMAZING template. Lots of it can be carved and used to apply a vast array of products. Give it a whirl. It's a great rainy day project. And don't forget to look through your kitchen. that electric knife you never use? totally great with the styrofoam.
view laura sue's profile