Waste station setup seems mundane, but it significantly affects whether waste gets tracked properly and whether you can act on the data.
Station Design Principles
Accessibility: Stations where waste occurs naturally. Too far away and staff won't use them.
Visibility: Easy to see what's happening. Hidden stations are poorly used stations.
Capacity: Big enough for volume; not so big they overflow between emptying.
Separation: Clear distinction between waste types (prep, plate, recycling).
Hygiene: Easy to clean, compliant with food safety requirements.
Station Locations
Prep stations: Near each prep area for prep waste Dish return: At dish washing area for plate waste Service area: For service waste (buffet remnants, display items) Storage area: For spoilage (items culled from storage)
Minimise distance between waste generation and waste station.
Bin Types and Sizes
Prep waste bins:
- Size matched to prep volume
- Easy to scrape into
- Frequently emptied for measurement
Plate waste bins:
- Positioned at dish return
- Separate from regular refuse
- May need liquid separation
Recycling bins:
- Clearly distinguished
- Proper signage
- Prevent contamination
Signage and Labelling
Clear signage drives compliance:
- Simple categories
- Pictures help (especially multilingual teams)
- Colour coding for quick identification
- Measurement prompts if tracking manually
Integration with Tracking
If using waste monitoring technology:
- Position sensors for optimal capture
- Ensure adequate lighting
- Plan for power and connectivity
- Consider line of sight for cameras
Station setup should support your tracking methodology.
Common Mistakes
- Stations too far from work areas
- Too many categories confusing staff
- Unclear labelling
- Insufficient capacity
- Poor maintenance
Ongoing Management
- Regular cleaning schedule
- Timely emptying
- Signage maintenance
- Periodic review of compliance
- Staff feedback incorporation
Explore our monitoring solutions and how they integrate with kitchen operations.