Contact Details
- Address: Oldings Corner Retail Park, Comet Way/Great North Road, Hatfield, AL9 5JY
- GPS: 51.7769786,-0.2215789
- Phone: 0800 0235882
- Email: info@eastangliansimplytextile.co.uk
- Website: https://www.cashforclothes.org.uk/
Opening Times
- Monday 10am - 5pm
- Tuesday 10am - 5pm
- Wednesday 10am - 5pm
- Thursday 10am - 5pm
- Friday 10am - 5pm
- Saturday 10am - 5pm
- Sunday 10am - 4pm
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Cash For Clothes – Hatfield specializes in recycling and waste management. It can be found at Oldings Corner Retail Park, Comet Way/Great North Road, Hatfield, AL9 5JY.
Materials accepted
It accepts the following types of waste and recyclable items here:
- Cash For Clothes
Residents who want to dispose of waste not listed here must contact the nearest tip to clarify if that type of waste is acceptable.
Cash For Clothes – Hatfield Recycling Facility buys unwanted old clothes for recycling or reuse from general public and trade and pays cash for recyclable clothing etc. The recycling centre is only for use by local residents.
Schedule
Cash For Clothes – Hatfield is closed on public holidays irrespective of the day of the week the date falls upon. It is usually open at the following times:
- Monday: 10am – 5pm
- Tuesday: 10am – 5pm
- Wednesday: 10am – 5pm
- Thursday: 10am – 5pm
- Friday: 10am – 5pm
- Saturday: 10am – 5pm
- Sunday: 10am – 4pm
Residents who wish to access the site with a large vehicle, such as a van or trailer, must contact the recycling centre to book an appointment and obtain a permit before their visit. Permits are free. It can be contacted via phone, email or online booking form.
Cash For Clothes – Hatfield can be contacted on 0800 0235882 for any queries residents may have on the service offered by the site.
Environment Agency online services
Frequently asked questions about Cash For Clothes – Hatfield
Recycling symbols are those images that appear on all kinds of products, articles and packaging so that consumers know what type of waste they are (recyclable or non-recyclable) and what material they are made of.
Recycling symbols are important because they guide us to manage our waste well. However, there are some products and packaging that have not been properly labeled and do not contain a recycling label.
If you have waste that you don’t know how to classify, contact your nearest recycling center.
If you have recently cleaned out your closet and you have clothes that you no longer use and you are thinking of throwing them away, you can check on our website which is the nearest recycling center where you can leave clothes, textiles and shoes that you no longer use.
You can find this information by choosing the category Cloth & Fabrics. There you will see the list of recycling centers with contact information: addresses, phones, e-mails.
You just have to and put your postal code or address.
Green recycling bins are typically the designated bins for depositing recyclable glass materials. However, this may vary depending on the municipality in which you are located. For example, in some municipalities the green color in the containers is used for dry recyclable materials.
It’s important not to confuse containers for glass recyclables or dry recyclables with wheelie bins that are for green yard waste.
To be sure of what you should deposit in your green container, you can contact your nearest recycling center and obtain more detailed information.
The disposable materials that we generate in our homes, depending on whether they are treated correctly or not, end up in landfills or household waste recycling centers.
A landfill is a site designated to dispose of the waste we generate. Typically, at these designated sites, large holes are built into which garbage is buried.
The recycling centers or household waste recycling centers, are places where recyclable waste is collected, separated and laid up, to be later transferred to another area or facility for recycling or transformation.
The recycling rate in the UK has increased in recent years, but so has the generation of waste.
The percentage that is recycled in the UK so far is approximately 45% of the waste generated.
The latest report from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) indicates that the waste generated in British homes amounts to approximately 26 million tonnes of waste each year, of which only 12 million are recycled. The other 14 million tons end up in landfills.