Startup recycling company in Louisiana offers solution for glass waste

Louisiana's glass was piling up, so two students decided to fix it.

May 21, 2022, 9:35 AM

What'll happen to this bottle of wine after it’s been finished and thrown away?

That’s the question that Franziska Trautmann and Max Steitz say they pondered one night. They thought about the bottle's destiny to join the over 11 million tons of glass fated for a landfill.

The Tulane University alumni say they then came up with the idea to turn that bottle back into the glass that birthed it. Two years after Glass Half Full NOLA brought its glass recycling services to New Orleans, Trautmann and Steitz went from crushing beer bottles in their backyard to running a company that they say has recycled over 2 million pounds of glass.

“I was a victim of this mindset before I started Glass Half Full NOLA, which is, ‘individuals can't do anything. It's like all the corporations that need to change and like they are the problem,’” said Trautmann. “Then after setting all of this up, I realized how much individuals can do.”

PHOTO: By turning glass back into sand Glass Half Full NOLA diverts 2 million pounds of bottles destined for landfills.
By turning glass back into sand Glass Half Full NOLA diverts 2 million pounds of bottles destined for landfills.
GlassHalfFull NOLA

The company is now going viral on TikTok for its satisfying glass-crushing videos. The recycled glass is crushed into sand or glass cullet, which are broken glass pieces. The sand or cullet is then sold for flooring, glass products, as gravel for driveways or used in sandbags, which is a valuable resource during hurricane season.

The company runs off of volunteers, including Tulane scientists. While the process is still in testing, Glass Half Full says recycled glass could potentially be used to help restore Louisiana coastlines and other natural areas.

PHOTO: It's not sharp, according to Fran Trautmann. The recycled sand is used in sand bags for hurricane season.
It's not sharp, according to Fran Trautmann. The recycled sand is used in sand bags for hurricane season.
GlassHalfFull NOLA

Katie Russell, a senior professor in Tulane’s chemical and biomolecular engineering department, said she wants to help restore the coastline because New Orleans is her home. Russell organizes student volunteers for Glass Half Full and says she thinks it’s important to preserve the port town as nature intended.

“We are taking a product, a waste product that would be put into a landfill. And instead, we're converting it into a useful product that can be used to do good in the community,” said Russell.

Russell also leads students in conducting experiments to see how the glass can be safely used in nature and manufacturing. Louisiana loses a football field worth of land every 100 minutes on average due to coastal restoration, so the company is focused on restoring land, according to Glass Half Full.

PHOTO: The business began in a backyard but increasing demand makes even its massive warehouse unable to catch up.
The business began in a backyard but increasing demand makes even its massive warehouse unable to catch up.
GlassHalfFull NOLA

“The power of this Glass Half Full family in New Orleans, Louisiana, is a community coming together to impart the change that they wanted. Whether that was folks donating time, or money, or expertise. It really is the story of a city or a state, a community coming together to impart the change that they wanted to see happen,” said Steitz.

Trautmann said she hopes that others will also start making more sustainable, small choices to help protect the planet. She recalled that when the business first started, she didn’t see much traction until the word got out.

PHOTO: Fran Trautmann (left) and Max Steitz (right) founded Glass Half Full NOLA as college students during a date night over a bottle of wine.
Fran Trautmann (left) and Max Steitz (right) founded Glass Half Full NOLA as college students during a date night over a bottle of wine.
GlassHalfFull NOLA

“As two kids, we lived a pretty sheltered life in our little two-lane bubble. And all of a sudden, we were getting inquiries from local nonprofits and organizations and other New Orleanians who wanted to help,” said Trautmann. “That kind of lit the fire under us to keep going and make this even bigger.”

Trautmann and Steiz believe the little actions people do each day to take care of the planet are the things that matter most in the world.

“Micro actions make up the macro,” said Steitz.

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