Circular Economy in Practice — How Recycled Glass Aggregate Powers Construction and Design

Beyond Bottles: The Hidden Potential of Glass

When most people think of glass recycling, they picture bottles. But broken or unusable glass has another life — as a recycled aggregate for construction, roadworks, and landscaping.

Bottle Logistics produces crushed glass aggregate from non-reusable bottles — clean, graded, and ready for industrial use.

Applications of Recycled Glass Aggregate

  • Concrete Additives: Used in decorative concrete for floors and countertops.
  • Road Base & Drainage: Offers good drainage and compaction properties.
  • Landscaping: Adds color and sparkle to gardens and pathways.
  • Filtration Media: Replaces sand in water filtration systems.

By using recycled glass, contractors reduce dependence on mined materials and help the planet.

Environmental Advantages

For every tonne of glass recycled:

  • CO₂ emissions drop by 300 kg
  • Energy use in new glass production falls by up to 30%
  • Landfill use decreases drastically

Each project that uses recycled aggregate contributes to carbon reduction and landfill diversion targets.

Quality and Safety

Our recycled glass is washed, screened, and quality tested to meet construction-grade standards. It’s safe to handle, non-toxic, and consistent in performance — ideal for sustainable builders and landscape designers.

The Circular Economy in Action

Instead of discarding broken glass, we turn it into construction value — keeping materials in use longer and cutting resource extraction.

This is what the circular economy looks like in practice: rethink, reuse, repurpose.

Partner With Us

We supply recycled glass aggregate in bulk for construction and landscaping projects. By sourcing from us, you:

  • Reduce your environmental footprint
  • Support local recycling jobs
  • Join the movement toward sustainable infrastructure

Bottle Logistics is proving that the future of construction can be built — literally — from yesterday’s waste.

Women & Youth in the Recycling Economy — Inclusive Growth Through Glass