Construction Debris: What You Can (and Can't) Take to the Dump
Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
Read more →Bibb County Landfill is Centreville's county landfill where household and business trash ends up buried. Local residents and haulers use it for final disposal, and commercial trucks also bring loads here. The site sits off Birmingham Road and is the kind of place that handles large volumes rather than small drop-offs.
Drive up to a scale and a scale house/booth where vehicles are weighed and tipping fees are calculated by weight, so expect to stop twice - once in and once out. After weighing in, follow the access road to the disposal area where you'll see heavy equipment and compacted mounds of trash; pull into a lane, tip or dump as directed, then return to the scale to be weighed for the fee. The site is large and open with gravel drives and working machinery; plan for dust in dry weather and mud after rain. Weekends and spring cleanup times tend to be noticeably busier, so queues at the booth are common.
Learn how to properly dispose of common items.

Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
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E-waste rules vary wildly by state. Some ban electronics from landfills entirely. Here's how to recycle old TVs, computers, and phones properly.
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Most counties run free household hazardous waste collection events. Here's what qualifies, how to find your local event, and how to store stuff safely until then.
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