The Indaiatuba Sanitary Landfill has gained a new visual identity and is now also a space for environmental education. It is the Corpus and the City Hall, working together to preserve the planet and future generations.
On Wednesday (21), the company’s board of directors and the mayor of Indaiatuba, Nilson Gaspar, got to know the new concept of the place that, in the first moment, will receive the students of the municipal network of Indaiatuba.
The site is face-to-face, gaining more modern and sustainable structures, which include art-science concepts. The goal is to show visitors a bit more about how waste management is done in the city.
In addition to increasing knowledge about the various ways to recycle recyclable materials, thus preserving the natural resources still available.
The first visit will be held on Friday, April 6, and during the tour, students will discover themselves, in a playful and relaxed way, as a fundamental part of maintaining a clean and well-preserved city.
The space has a garden and gazebo made with recyclable materials, among them: tiles made of toothpaste tubes, tire treads, wooden benches and reused building blocks. And it still has a green wall that keeps your temperature cooler and comfortable.
Corpus directors Ricardo Valente, André Lima and João Paschoalini, the consultant José de Arruda Sampaio, the mayor Nilson Gaspar, the secretary of Urbanism and Environment, Leandro Dias de Souza and members of the technical staff of the municipality participated in the visit.
The changes
The Multipurpose Space can work as both a training room and a place to receive playful presentations. With capacity for 30 people and accessibility, its infrastructure is made of reforestation wood and uses water of reuse in the toilets. During the stay, participants will be able to charge their cell phone through solar energy.
In the Mobile Ecopoint, the underground collection system and the Triage Center, students will be able to closely monitor how the materials collected in the city’s ecopoints are stored, and learn more about how these materials can gain a new use.
The new visual identity was made by graffiti artists, Christian “Psedks” and Edson “Doug 13”. The artists are also responsible for the art printed on the skateboard of the Jardim California neighborhood, built by PMI.