Interviews Smart City

How can Envac contribute to sustainable urban planning for events like the coming Olympics?

Amanda Yeates explains how Envac can support sustainable planning for major events ahead of 2032: with a $2B arena and an Athletes’ Village coming to the Sunshine Coast, scalable automated waste collection handles surging crowds more cleanly than traditional approaches.

This video is part of our Q&A series where Amanda Yeates shares insights into the implementation of the Envac system on the Sunshine Coast, Australia. Each episode covers a different aspect of the project, and you can explore the rest of the series below

Interviews Smart City

How did stakeholders and the community react to the Envac system?

Stakeholders and visitors increasingly associate Maroochydore’s new CBD with its first-in-Australia underground, automated waste system—Amanda Yeates says it’s become a standout talking point nationally and internationally.
For residents and workers, the reaction is more practical: quieter mornings without truck beepers, fewer heavy vehicles and overflowing bins, and a cleaner, safer streetscape that now feels “normal” in the city centre.

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Interviews Smart City

What appealed to you about the Envac system?

Amanda Yeates shares why Envac appealed: it was a proven, internationally deployed alternative to traditional waste collection—already operating at scale (e.g., Korea). Introducing it at Maroochydore City Centre brought Australia’s first system of its kind, offering a reliable, modern solution.

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