Red’s Recycling Center – 2700

2700 Commercial Drive – East Vancouver

At a busy community recycling depot in Vancouver, David Suzuki adjusts his glasses, smiles at the small crowd, and begins:


โ€œRecycling isnโ€™t just housekeeping,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s biology, chemistry, and respect for the Earth. Everything we throw away goes somewhere. The question is โ€” where?โ€

He gestures toward a row of clearly labeled bins.


๐ŸŸฆ 1. Paper & Cardboard

โ€œPaper comes from trees. Trees pull carbon from the atmosphere. So when we recycle paper, we reduce logging pressure and energy use.โ€

What goes in:

  • Newspapers
  • Office paper
  • Cardboard boxes (flattened)
  • Paper bags

What stays out:

  • Greasy pizza boxes (oil contaminates fibers)
  • Waxed or plastic-coated paper
  • Tissues and paper towels

โ€œFlatten your boxes,โ€ Suzuki adds. โ€œSpace matters. Efficiency matters.โ€


๐ŸŸฉ 2. Plastics

He lifts a plastic bottle.

โ€œPlastic is fossil fuel in solid form. It doesnโ€™t belong in nature.โ€

Check the number inside the recycling triangle:

  • #1 (PET) โ€“ water & soda bottles
  • #2 (HDPE) โ€“ milk jugs, detergent bottles

โ€œThese are widely recyclable.โ€

Be cautious with:

  • #3โ€“#7 plastics โ€” depends on your municipality
  • Plastic bags โ€” usually require separate drop-off

โ€œRinse containers,โ€ he reminds. โ€œFood residue can ruin an entire batch.โ€


๐ŸŸจ 3. Metals

โ€œAluminum is a miracle material. Recycling it saves up to 95% of the energy required to make new aluminum.โ€

Recycle:

  • Soda cans
  • Food tins (rinsed)
  • Clean foil

โ€œMetal can be recycled almost indefinitely,โ€ he says. โ€œThatโ€™s circular economy in action.โ€


๐ŸŸซ 4. Glass

Glass bins clink softly as someone drops in a jar.

โ€œGlass can be endlessly recycled without losing quality.โ€

Sort by color if required:

  • Clear
  • Green
  • Brown

Remove lids and rinse out residue.


๐ŸŸช 5. Electronics (E-Waste)

Suzuki holds up an old cellphone.

โ€œThis is where modern waste gets dangerous.โ€

Electronics contain:

  • Heavy metals
  • Lithium batteries
  • Rare earth minerals

Never put e-waste in regular recycling.
Take it to a designated e-waste collection point.

โ€œIf we toss this in landfill,โ€ he explains, โ€œtoxins leak into soil and water.โ€


๐ŸŸซ 6. Organics / Compost

He picks up a compost bin lid.

โ€œNature has no waste. A forest floor recycles everything.โ€

Compost:

  • Fruit & vegetable scraps
  • Coffee grounds
  • Eggshells
  • Yard waste

Avoid plastics (even if they look biodegradable unless certified for your facility).


โšซ 7. Landfill (Last Resort)

Suzuki grows serious.

โ€œThis bin should be the smallest.โ€

Examples:

  • Broken ceramics
  • Styrofoam (if not locally accepted)
  • Contaminated materials

โ€œLandfill is failure. Itโ€™s what we couldnโ€™t redesign, reuse, or rethink.โ€


๐ŸŒŽ His Final Advice

โ€œRecycling is important โ€” but reducing comes first. Ask yourself:

  • Do I need this?
  • Can I reuse it?
  • Can I repair it?โ€

He pauses.

โ€œThe planet doesnโ€™t need a few people recycling perfectly. It needs millions recycling properly.โ€

He smiles and tosses a rinsed aluminum can into the metal bin with a satisfying clang.

โ€œAnd remember โ€” waste is a human concept. In nature, everything cycles. We just have to catch up.โ€

Scientology In East Van

Joe Jukic and Tom Cruise stand on Kingsway, the traffic humming past like a steady baseline. The old Scientology center is gone nowโ€”just another storefront swallowed by timeโ€”but Joe remembers it clearly.

Joe Jukic:
โ€œYou know, Tom, this place used to pull people in. Not with signs or hypeโ€”just curiosity. East Van was different back then.โ€

Tom looks around, hands in his jacket pockets, studying the neighborhood the way he studies a set before cameras roll.

Tom Cruise:
โ€œPlaces hold energy. Even when the buildingโ€™s gone, the idea isnโ€™t. East Van still has that mixโ€”working people, immigrants, artists, skeptics. Thatโ€™s where conversations actually matter.โ€

They start walking, the topic drifting naturally toward Findlay Street.

Joe:
โ€œIโ€™ve been thinking about the Croatian Center. Community hub. People already go there to talk, argue, eat, plan weddings, plan protests. If anything ever came back, it would need to respect that.โ€

Tom nods. Heโ€™s not pitchingโ€”heโ€™s listening.

Tom:
โ€œYou donโ€™t drop something new into a neighborhood. You let it grow out of whatโ€™s already there. If it doesnโ€™t serve the locals, it fails. Simple.โ€

Joe gestures down the street.

Joe:
โ€œNear Chris Armstrongโ€™s old placeโ€”quiet block, but central. Not flashy. More like a place for study, conversation, self-discipline. No mystery, no sales pitch.โ€

Tom smiles slightly at that.

Tom:
โ€œPeople underestimate how hungry they are for structure that isnโ€™t coercive. A space to focus. Train the mind. Ask hard questions without being told what to think.โ€

They stop walking. For a moment, itโ€™s just two guys imagining a different use for square footage.

Joe:
โ€œEast Van doesnโ€™t need another gimmick. It needs places that take people seriously.โ€

Tom:
โ€œThen if anything ever happens here, thatโ€™s the rule. Respect first. Everything else second.โ€

They shake handsโ€”not sealing a deal, just acknowledging a shared ideaโ€”and head off in opposite directions, Kingsway swallowing the moment like it does with everything else.