Our Story
Our History
ECOLOGY ACTION OF TEXAS WAS FOUNDED IN 1969 BY A GROUP OF VISIONARY UT STUDENTS AFTER THE ROUND EARTH CONFERENCE ON UT CAMPUS, PART OF THE ORGANIZING FOR THE FIRST EARTH DAY CELEBRATION. AN ALL VOLUNTEER GROUP AT THE TIME, ECOLOGY ACTION SOUGHT TO PROMOTE A VARIETY OF ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES, EVENTUALLY FOCUSING ON RECYCLING AND LANDFILL DIVERSION. TODAY, WE CONTINUE IN ECOLOGY ACTION'S TRADITION OF STEWARDSHIP ACROSS THE CITY OF AUSTIN, SERVING THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY AS TRUSTED ADVOCATES OF THE ENVIRONMENT.
Since it's founding in 1969, Ecology Action has been committed to the mission of landfill diversion and zero waste awareness in Austin, Texas and the surrounding region.
At a time when waste management meant getting rubbish out of sight and out of mind, Ecology Action pioneered the development of grassroots recycling solutions that eventually helped lead to the institutionalization of recycling and reuse through programs like City of Austin curbside recycling, Universal Recycling Ordinance, the Zero Waste Initiative, and the Recycling and Reuse Drop Off Center.
Ecology Action envisions a world where landfills are no longer necessary. For almost 50 years we have been turning waste into resources, processing materials to their highest and best use. We have consistently led the way in regional expansion of recycling and reuse into more challenging waste streams, from pioneering electronic recycling programs to launching the Austin Materials Marketplace, facilitating business-to-business reuse.
Land is a material good that is paradoxically both an essential resource and all too often a waste stream. Recycling land to it’s highest and best use means examining what its potential value is economically, socially, and ecologically.
To that end, Circle Acres is Ecology Action's first experiment in recycling contaminated and wasted land into an ecological safe haven and a community resource. We aim to reach a balance between the preservation of nature and human engagement by making the remediation of the site our primary focus and the public's primary attraction. Our goal is not to transform the landfill into a space that the public would never imagine was once a hazard, but rather to aid in it's healing while constantly reminding visitors of the impact that our wastefulness and consumption can have on land. This means that standing next to a beautiful willow tree, one might also see a twisted pile of rebar protruding from the soil or a garden of discarded cement storm culverts intermixed within a garden of wild native grasses. It is an expansion on our vision of a world without landfills by bringing to fruition a small piece of that vision.