Electronic Recycling College Park

Your Local Recycling Expertsstat

Experience secure and environmentally friendly electronic recycling in College Park. Reworx Recycle Computers, Electronics Recycling & Recycle Laptops ensures responsible e-waste disposal and data protection.

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100% Customer Satisfaction

About Reworx Recycle

Leading the Way in Electronics Recycling

Are you looking for e-waste disposal, eco-friendly electronics recycling, and secure data destruction? Our outreach is nationwide.

Hands holding various electronic components, including a circuit board, keyboard, tablet, and cables, illustrating e-waste recycling and sustainable electronics disposal.

Why Choose Our Services

Top Benefits of Electronic Recycling in GA

  • Protect your data with secure data destruction services.
  • Ensure environmental compliance and sustainability.
  • Reduce hazardous materials in landfills.
  • Save money with efficient e-waste recycling.
  • Green recycling bins with electronic waste like headphones and gaming controllers, emphasizing eco-friendly disposal practices for electronics recycling.

    About Reworx Recycle Computers, Electronics Recycling & Recycle Laptops

    Your Trusted Recycling Partner

    Reworx Recycle Computers, Electronics Recycling & Recycle Laptops has been serving College Park, GA, and Fulton County with top-tier electronic recycling services. Our team is dedicated to environmental sustainability and data protection. We specialize in secure shredding services and HIPAA compliant recycling, ensuring that your electronic waste is disposed of responsibly.

    Assorted electronic waste including old mobile phones, tangled wires, and various electronic components, representing the importance of responsible recycling practices in Brookwood, GA.

    Our Recycling Process

    Step-by-Step Recycling

    1. Collection: We pick up your electronic waste.

    2. Data Destruction: Secure data destruction to protect your information.

    3. Recycling: Environmentally friendly recycling of all materials.

    Worker in green helmet and mask sorting electronic waste, surrounded by discarded computer components, highlighting sustainable electronic recycling practices.
    Person holding electronic devices, including a smartphone and a disassembled phone, near a green recycling bin with a recycling symbol, emphasizing electronic waste disposal and recycling services.

    Importance of Electronic Recycling

    Why Recycle Electronics?

    Electronic recycling is crucial for protecting the environment and conserving resources. Reworx Recycle Computers, Electronics Recycling & Recycle Laptops offers comprehensive electronics recycling services in College Park, GA, and Fulton County. Our sustainable practices and secure recycling process ensure that hazardous materials are safely disposed of, and valuable materials are recovered. Contact us at 678-449-0003 to learn more about our responsible recycling services.

    Ready to enjoy these benefits? Contact us today at 678-449-0003!

    View Our E Waste Services

    About Reworx Recycling

    Contact us

    The community that became College Park was founded as Atlantic City in 1890 as a depot on the Atlanta and West Point Railroad. The town was renamed Manchester when it was incorporated as a city in 1891. It was renamed again as the city of College Park in 1896. The city’s name came from being the home of Cox College (where the city hall and other buildings now stand) and Georgia Military Academy (now the Woodward Academy). The east-west avenues in College Park are named for Ivy League colleges, and the north-south streets are named for influential College Park residents.

    During World War I, the name of Wilhelm Street was changed to Victoria Street in “solidarity with our British brethren.” At the same time Berlin Avenue was changed to Cambridge Avenue and the name of German Lane was changed to English Lane. The history of College Park has been closely linked with what is now known as Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport-airport development having spurred several radical changes to the landscape of the municipality over the course of the 20th century. In 1966, a study funded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development suggested that the introduction and expansion of jet aircraft travel would place the airport and surrounding communities, including College Park, into conflict; ultimately, the study concluded that “the only effective way to control the use of land is to own it,” suggesting that the airport would have to acquire the properties it would be in conflict with in order to expand.

    In the 1970s and 1980s, large swaths of property in College Park were purchased using information detailed in The Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport Noise Land Reuse Plan, which allowed the airport to apply for federal funding to purchase property deemed to be in so-called “noise land.” The 1985 Chuck Norris film Invasion U.S.A. was notoriously filmed in these abandoned portions of College Park; houses owned by the City of Atlanta and the FAA were allowed to be blown up to simulate bazooka attacks, a decision that has faced modern day criticism due to the fact that nearby properties were still in the process of being purchased. This site would eventually, in 2003, in part be home to the ; the center officially opened in 1985 at a separate location, but was relocated to the area in response to planned airport runway expansions. Today, the GICC is the second largest convention center in Georgia, featuring a carpeted ballroom and multiple spaces for meetings, conferences and conventions. It is the only convention center in the country that also houses a SkyTrain with direct rail access to an international airport. Directly next to the Georgia International Convention Center is the , which opened in November 2019, home to the NBA’s G-League College Park Skyhawks and where the WNBA’s Atlanta Dream will play their 2020 season.

    Learn more about College Park.