Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Southwark Council's website says the recycling centre does not take "paint tins" but paint is not mentioned anywhere.

I have a load of paint tins with unused (and so old that it might be  unusable) paint. Some of them are full, or nearly full.

What can I do with them?  Put them in the green bin with the paint in?

I've found another website (not the council) which says that the Southwark recycling centre does take paint, so now I'm thoroughly confused. And it also says not to put paint in with general household rubbish. I've got to do something with it!

Edited by Sue
Adding information
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/338628-where-can-i-take-unused-paint/
Share on other sites

Yes I believe if the tin is half full they will take it to be reused, else they are happy for empty or dried out tins to be added to the big household waste container. 

To dry you just need to leave the lid off - it will take some time! 

Edited by chris_i
1 hour ago, h3+ said:

I would try leaving it outside your house with a note saying its free. I've done this and the tin goes in a few hours 

or https://communityrepaint.org.uk/i_need_paint/southwark/

That would have been a good idea, but for the fact that  someone recently trailed blue paint all over several walls in my road, apparently deliberately 🙄, so I'm not risking it. Also a cat trod in it so there were blue paw prints (and presumably a cat with paint on its paws 😭)

Thanks for the useful link, h3+, and the  other replies. I did think I had seen paint cans at the tip in the past, which was why I was confused when I checked on the website.

I will take them there!

Edited by Sue
4 hours ago, Sue said:

Southwark Council's website says the recycling centre does not take "paint tins" but paint is not mentioned anywhere.

The website says you can't put "paint tins" in normal recycling: https://www.southwark.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling/recycling/what-goes-in-recycling

And also that you shouldn't take normal recycling along to the tip: https://www.southwark.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling/recycling/recycling-centres/reuse-and-recycling-centre?chapter=3

But I can't see anything that says you can't take paint tins to the tip. In any case, you definitely can take paint there. Good luck!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A common face around here. He and his partner usually hang around Goose green area - lives very locally. usually rides a black mountain bike. keep an eye out for him
    • Could be kids, Blue translucent plastic frame. Placed in the lost stuff holder on the goose green noticboard near Goose Green roundabout at 16.00 today
    • But you say in a previous post that you weren't very interested in this house in the first place, and yet you have got to this point despite knowing there had been  subsidence, and then  having discovered several  issues which the present owners  hadn't disclosed? I'm wondering at what point it would feel so  insufficiently right that you walked away? I completely understand your exhaustion, but won't you be even more exhausted if you go ahead with this purchase? As regards drainage issues, I  can tell you from my own experience that Thames Water will argue that it is your responsibility to deal with a drain even if from their own website content it is clearly theirs. And you might find someone in an obscure TW  department who tells you off the record that you are right, but that his  department is not the department which deals with repairs, and he has no contact with that department, and he asks you not to quote him or mention his name, or he will get into trouble 🙄
    • 30 years ago you could buy and sell houses that had been underpinned without too much worry as long as the paperwork was in place. Huge swathes of Victorian and Edwardian, and occasionally between the wars, properties are underpinned in SE London.  Many after the 1976 drought and no doubt following the increasingly common droughts we are seeing in recent decades due to climate change. First issue was when insurers got funny, Direct Line I remember, wont insure many SE post codes. I'm not sure why there is more concern now, although five subsidence claims is quite impressive. As others say if is it discounted and you are prepared to take the risk... Not sure what others think of structural surveys, difficult here is that you need to monitor movement for six months or longer.  And older properties will move slightly with the shrinkage and expansion of the clay.  Most are out of true (look at how square original door ways are); some would have moved following bombing in the blitz. Odd how much we invest in a pile of bricks that will age and deteriorate.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...