New York City is preparing for a major shift in the way it handles residential trash, with plans to replace nearly 30,000 curbside parking spaces with large communal garbage bins over the next several years.Â
The initiative is part of the city’s broader strategy to keep sidewalks cleaner, reduce overflowing trash, and tackle its long-standing rat problem.
Under the proposal, the Department of Sanitation plans to install about 66,000 “Empire Bins” across the city by 2032. The rollout is expected to remove approximately 29,842 on-street parking spaces, about 1.5% of the city’s legal curbside parking.Â
The containers, intended primarily for larger residential buildings, will replace trash bags left on sidewalks and be emptied by specialized side-loading sanitation trucks.
City officials say the new system will make neighborhoods cleaner, improve public health, and help reduce rodent populations by keeping garbage sealed in secure containers instead of piled on sidewalks.
Not everyone is convinced. Drivers and community groups have raised concerns that eliminating thousands of parking spaces could make it even harder to find street parking in many neighborhoods.Â
Before the plan moves forward, it will undergo environmental review and a public comment process, giving residents an opportunity to weigh in on the proposal.Â
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