Project Green Ball

Project Green Ball

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Project Green Ball is a sustainability initiative to recycle used tennis balls and to donate surfaces based on the recycled balls. PGB has ceased operations.

We maintain this page for historical information. Please donate your balls to recycleballs.org. PROJECT GREEN BALL HAS CEASED OPERATIONS. WE CONTINUE TO MAINTAIN THIS PAGE FOR HISTORICAL PURPOSES. IN THE MEANTIME, IF YOU HAVE TENNIS BALLS TO DONATE, PLEASE SEND TO RECYCLEBALLS.ORG –

https://www.recycleballs.org/

Mission

Project Green Ball is a sustainability initiative to coordinate innovative

Recycleballs.org – Yellow is the New Green 10/05/2020

PROJECT GREEN BALL HAS CEASED OPERATIONS. WE CONTINUE TO MAINTAIN THIS PAGE FOR HISTORICAL PURPOSES. IN THE MEANTIME, IF YOU HAVE TENNIS BALLS TO DONATE, PLEASE SEND TO RECYCLEBALLS.ORG –

https://www.recycleballs.org/

Recycleballs.org – Yellow is the New Green This is an easy to use no-cost tennis ball recycling solution with a number of benefits for approved facilities. You’ll receive a comprehensive program your players will love.

Regis Tennis Goes Green 12/08/2016

Thanks to the Regis College tennis team for continuing its support of Project Green Ball!

Regis Tennis Goes Green The Regis (Mass.) men’s and women’s tennis teams use more than 20 cases of tennis balls every year – 500 cans, 1,500 balls.

Photos from SquashCares's post 11/05/2016

Great work by SquashCares sewing two more ball blankets with SquashBusters middle schoolers today. SquashCares has now sewed 24 ball blankets and donated them to 10 organizations servicing people with ADHD and autism. Over 5,000 dead squash balls have been reused by this program.

Yellow, Fuzzy and Flat: Where Do Recycled Tennis Balls Go? 09/10/2016

Tennis ball recycling is big time now - check out The New York Times article - http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/09/11/sports/tennis/yellow-fuzzy-and-flat-where-do-recycled-tennis-balls-go.html. Tomorrow the article will be in the print edition!

Yellow, Fuzzy and Flat: Where Do Recycled Tennis Balls Go? Although most tennis balls end up in landfills, there is a growing effort to reuse them.

New Balls, Please 09/05/2016

First how tennis balls are made - http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/04/sports/tennis/wilson-tennis-balls-made.html?_r=0 - and later this week in The New York Times (hopefully) how they are recycled. Keep checking The New York Times Sports section this week for an article about tennis ball recycling!

New Balls, Please A factory outside of Bangkok cranks out millions of tennis balls. Here’s how they’re made.

Photos from Project Green Ball's post 08/01/2016

50,000 tennis balls (10 pallets) OUT! and IN(to) new Laykold Masters tennis courts - the first cushioned court with a shock pad that absorbs up to 10,000 recycled tennis balls in a single tennis court. Check the courts out at Tennis Ball Courts Thanks to all who contributed balls to Project Green Ball!

Photos from Project Green Ball's post 07/29/2016

More balls from 3 more clubs - Thanks to the Belmont Hill Club in Belmont, MA for contributing another 1500 balls, Twin Arbors Athletic Club in Lodi, CA for sending another 1100 balls and, first time contributor, Tascosa Golf Club in Amarillo, TX for sending 150 balls. Special shout out to tennis pro's Aaron and Steve at Tascosa for supporting PGB. We are over 293,000 balls collected now!

Photos from Project Green Ball's post 07/11/2016

Thanks to Rick Sharton Tennis Director at the Thoreau Club for contributing 1,400 balls to Project Green Ball and to UMass Amherst for contributing 659 balls to PGB! Altogether we have now collected over 290,000 balls! Help us get to 300,000 this summer!

Timeline photos 05/21/2016

Thanks to Coach Tim Smith and the Longwood Covered Courts for contributing 900 dead balls to Project Green Ball. We are just short of 290,000 balls collected. Please keep your balls coming!

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