Construction Waste Gets a Second Life at ASQ


On any construction job site, waste piles up fast — broken bricks, busted tiles, leftover concrete, glass, plasterboard. It’s part of the work. Instead of letting that material go to waste, that’s where the real opportunity begins — turning what was once discarded into something valuable, sustainable, and for reuse locally.

In Central Victoria, we’re not just dumping and forgetting. We’re recycling construction and demolition waste on an industrial scale, turning it into new materials that stay right here, supporting the local supply chain across Bendigo, Castlemaine, Maryborough, and surrounding areas.

At the heart of this operation is the Eaglehawk Recycling facility, which has been serving the community since 1999. In that time, we’ve recycled over 700,000 tonnes of material.

Instead of construction and demolition waste heading straight to landfill, it’s processed, crushed, screened, and repurposed into materials like Recycled Asphalt, Crushed Brick, Crushed Concrete, Recycled Glass Sand, and Recycled Gypsum. These materials are made to meet VicRoads and other civil specifications for reuse in infrastructure projects, roadworks, concrete production, agriculture, and other key applications across the region.

Recycling at the job site:

  • Separate and sort your waste loads — concrete, bricks, tiles, glass
  • Keep it clean — no food scraps, ice-coffee bottles, plastic wrap, twine, or general rubbish
  • Drop it off for recycling — we’re open from 7:30am to 5pm Monday to Friday, and 8am to 12pm on Saturday
  • Choose recycled products for backfill, drainage, paths, and driveways

Whether you’re pouring a slab or ripping one up, you’ve got the power to reduce waste and support smarter building practices. Watch the video to see how it all works.

At ASQ, we’re not just recycling materials — we’re building the future from the ground up, with recycled products in use across all our sites.

ASQ Garden & Landscape in Castlemaine and Maryborough play a key role in this process, acting as transfer stations for the Eaglehawk Recycling facility. They help streamline the flow of materials, ensuring that construction and demolition waste is collected locally and sent on for processing, turning what would be waste into valuable resources.