Skip to main content

Hardstaff Barriers to recycle all PPE

Hardstaff is working with Granite Workwear which has launched its own textile destruction and recycling service for old or damaged workwear and personal protective equipment - PPE.
By David Arminas February 8, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Time to recycle tired and worn-out essential workwear, that personal protective equipment (image © Fedecandoniphoto/Dreamstime)

Hardstaff Barriers said that it is now ensuring that all personal protective equipment (PPE) at the end of its useful life is recycled.

PPE has been widely used in the workplace for many years, but since the outbreak of Covid-19, its use has skyrocketed, according to the company, part of UK-based Hill and Smith Holdings, an international group of companies operating within the infrastructure and galvanizing markets..

Hardstaff Barriers, based in the UK and which manufactures and supplies vehicle restraint systems and security barriers, has teamed up with Granite Workwear, an ISO14001 certified company which has launched its own textile destruction and recycling service for old or damaged workwear and PPE. Granite Workwear destroys all clothing, including boots and belts, by recycling it into new fibres, for a variety of products including new fabrics.

Plastics from safety glasses and helmets are re-chipped for re-use in the plastic industry. Metals from studs, buttons, zips and toe caps and melted down for reuse.

The only product that it cannot recycle is the high visibility tape, which goes to incineration.

The service is carried out by Granite at no cost, with customers simply needing to send the clothing back to them. “As far as we know, we are also the first company to offer complete recycling and re-tasking of all workwear and PPE products that have been purchased from us, ensuring a full circular economy and not just a recycling economy,” said Simon Towle, director at Granite Workwear.

Meanwhile, Hill and Smith said that is has now completed the move of all its vehicle restraint system subsidiaries into one operating unit, called VRS Solutions Group.

The latest company to move over and get a brand remake is Varley and Gulliver, Hill and Smith’s UK-manufacturer of bridge parapets, pedestrian barriers and passive sign supports. All products are tested to EN1317, CE marked and MASH and NCHRP350 approved and many have been installed worldwide: pedestrian parapets at the Sheikh Zayed Bridge in Abu Dhabi where the rails were designed to resemble an airplane wing, the Erskine Bridge in Scotland and at the Sitra Causeway in Bahrain.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Zipping up road lanes – with Barrier Systems
    September 10, 2018
    QMB has a Lindsay Road Zipper on duty near Montreal. World Highways deputy editor David Arminas climbed aboard As vice president of Canadian barrier specialist QMB, based in Laval, Quebec, Marc-Andre Seguin is sanguine about the future for moveable barriers. On the one hand, it looks good. The oft-stated advantage of moveable barriers is that the systems are cheaper to install than adding a lane or two to a highway or bridge. Directional changes to lanes can boost volume on a road without disrupting tra
  • Smiley Monroe’s Zip Clip “spare tyre” conveyor belt solution
    April 18, 2016
    Smiley Monroe’s innovative new Zip Clip replacement conveyor belt solution is said by the firm’s marketing manager, Tim Monroe, to be “like a spare tyre for your crushing and screening plant”. Tailored for the aftermarket of Smiley Monroe’s crushing, screening & recycling Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) customers, Zip Clip is said to avoid prolonged and costly downtime in a breakdown situation.
  • Shhhh, keeping roads quiet
    September 1, 2022
    Effective noise protection is an essential part of road infrastructure- both temporarily during construction and permanently along the finished road.
  • Nuphalt is well-prepared to meet the growing challenge for road repairs
    November 21, 2023

    2023 is proving to be a great year for the Nuphalt Group. Beginning in January with a move into their brand-new, purpose-built facility in Rugby, UK, utilising new mezzanine floors (increased manufacturing space by 50%), adding state-of-the-art laser cutting equipment and, of course, bringing everything under one roof. And with 100 kW of PV solar power up there, that’s no ordinary roof! The move to a more self-sufficient premises is all part of Nuphalt’s vision for a greener future.