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Economic Development

End of an era for Packington Landfill

It has been announced that the Packington Landfill Site is going to close - but the new geological feature created by earth movements, will remain for ever.

Motorists travelling along the M42 near the NEC could be forgiven for thinking it might be the remnants of a once active volcano.

But the big hill which has formed by earth movements at the Packington Landfill Site over 50 years.

Now it has been announced that the dumping facility is going to close – but the new geological feature will remain for ever.

The company which runs the 385-acre site revealed that the reconstruction of Germany after the Second World War played a big part in how Packington was formed.

Stuart Hayward Higham, technical director for SITA º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, explained why one of the site’s early bosses went ‘up’ rather than down when the former sand and gravel quarry became a landfill site.

Mr Hayward Higham explained: “Tony Biddle, one of founding people of this site was a very colourful character.

“He came out of the military and had been involved in helping to restore Europe after the war, taking rubble and making it into shapes.

“He built hills from rubble in Germany after the war.