Brock Road Landfills are a series of landfills used by Toronto (acquired by Metro Toronto in 1969) from 1975 to 1990s.[1] The North and West site are in Pickering, while the South site is in Ajax.
Only Brock North and Brock South were used as dumps, whereas Brock South site was acquired and left unused.
The sites are now closed was due to capacity and public pressure to continued use of site for Toronto's garbage and the sensitivity of the site to nearby farms, protected areas (Grand Valley Park and Greenwood Conservation Area), residential homes. The Duffins Creek watershed passes west and east of the site and areas near the dump contain First Nations sites.[2]
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Brock West site is located west of Decker’s Hill and was an active dump from 1975 to 1997 and located west of Brock Road and on the northside of 3rd Concession.[3]() It could hold 18 million tonnes of waste, including 100,000 tonnes which were transferred from Brock North. [4]
Surrounded by wood area and farmland, the site closed after 1997. 3rd Concession ends at the locked gate. A plant to capture gas from the garbage was added in 1991.
Brock North landfill was located between Highway 7 and 5th Concession and east of 16th Sideline. () It was acquired along with Brock West and South in 1969 by Toronto, but it was not an active dump until the 1970s and was used briefly. [5] The site was 732 acres (296 ha) in area and closed in 1996 and 100,000 tonnes waste from the site was removed relocated to Brock West. [6], [7]
The site is now abandoned with locked gates and partial concrete driveway on 5th Concession a reminder of the location's previous use. With Brock South the land will be sold by Toronto to the TRCA.
Brock South is the smallest of the three sites at 237 acres (96 ha) and located directly south of Brock North site between 16th Sideline and Church Street North.() It was never used as a landfill and remains private property. [8] The eastern end of the site borders Greenwood Conservation Area.
The Brock North and South sites are being sold/transferred to the Toronto and Area Conservation Authority and reverted to natural state. As both sites no longer contain garbage, they are excellent candidates for remediation. The conversion to conservation lands was agreed upon during the original sale in the late 1960s. The site will likely increase the size of neighbouring Greenwood Conservation Area (owned by the Town of Ajax, Ontario.
Metro Toronto Works was operator of landfills until 1983 and maintained sites until 1997. A list of other landfill used or being used by Toronto to dump the city's waste: