The Second-Life Tote Project
Home / Catalogue A / No.009
Reuse No.009 · Water Storage & Rainwater Harvesting

Hydroponic / aquaponic nutrient reservoir, built from a recycled IBC tote

An opaque-wrapped food-grade bladder gives ample, algae-resistant reservoir volume for hydroponics or aquaponics while reusing a container instead of buying virgin plastic.

Component
Recycled HDPE bladder
Indicative price
CAD $150–$260
Replaces
a purpose-built hydro reservoir
Alt. cost
CAD $250–$500

Recycled IBC

CAD $150–$260

Reuses a durable, standardised container. Diverts it from scrap and avoids new-material carbon.

vs

a purpose-built hydro reservoir

CAD $250–$500

A purpose-built product — bought new, moulded or fabricated from virgin material.

See it in use

MorningChores — stacked aquaponics tiers →

A real-world write-up with photos of this reuse in practice.

The honest case

An opaque-wrapped food-grade bladder gives ample, algae-resistant reservoir volume for hydroponics or aquaponics while reusing a container instead of buying virgin plastic. That advantage is real for this job specifically — not a blanket claim that a tote is best for everything.

Suitability & safety

This is a water- or contact-adjacent use. Use only a documented previous-food-use bladder that has been properly cleaned; never use a non-food or unknown-history tote for it.

For any water-holding reuse, shield the bladder from sunlight to prevent algae, fit food-safe fittings, and rinse thoroughly before first use.

Indicative Southern Ontario pricing; confirm locally. Not legal, engineering, or drinking-water certification advice. Verify the tote's prior contents and clean appropriately before reuse.