Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Green Living Centre

    4.0 (1 review)

    Green Living Centre Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Green Living Centre

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    14 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Reverse Garbage

    Reverse Garbage

    (7 reviews)

    $

    As we walk into Reverse Garbage in Marrickville we are met with gigantic paint brushes and pencils…read more The exterior of this recycling warehouse is almost an art installation more so than a shop. "You can't look for something here. You just have to look and hope you find something." I am told when I ask what we are looking for. The answer to my innocent question both profound and vague. We scour the aisles looking for props and set pieces for the music video we've been hired to make. The gigantic dinosaur head is no good, nor are the various blow up hippopotami with back packs on. There are buckets full of circuit boards and shelves full of old digitised and erased film and audio reels. It would seem that everything you could ever imagine would be, at one point or another, housed within these walls. There's a book section out back and I sneak in to have a look, I should be looking for music video props but can't help myself and scour the children's section looking for Seuss. No such luck, there never is. I find 'The Little Match Girl' by Hans Christian Anderson and being that it is in great condition and only $1 I decide to buy it, even though I know that it will make me depressed. A warehouse full of everything you need as long as you don't know what you need.

    This place is simultaneously the biggest hoarder of crap and a gold-mine. Depending on what you're…read moreafter. If you're after 20 of the same birthday card, 100m long reams of paper, a never ending supply of pipe cleaners, rolls of carpet and maroon velvet or manikin feet and arms, then you may just be in luck. Or, rather, if you're not exactly sure what you're after then you may be in luck here too. I'm a bigger fan of The Bower, a similar joint next door with a tad more class, but a trip to Reverse Garbage can be rewarding - we bought 50 cardboard drums from Reverse Garbage which we used as seating for a performance and then recycled into punch bowls, a fortress and super-sized bowling pins in the future. Perfect for a themed party, you can pretty much base your theme on whatever you find the most of at Reverse Garbage. NB: Specified items may or may not actually be stocked by Reverse Garbage. But rest assured that similar such crap will be.

    OzHarvest - OzHarvest Volunteers

    OzHarvest

    (2 reviews)

    OzHarvest is a non-profit organization that collects excess food from restaurants/events and…read moredelivers to people in need. I have been a volunteer with OzHarvest for a couple of months and I am loving it ! Everyone I met through my volunteering is cool, funny, full of love and warmth. Lisa & team do a great job in organizing various events to promote OzHarvest or rescuing more food :) The process to becoming a volunteer is simple. Just click on their website, contact them. Lisa will invite you to their office for a quick chat, fill up a simple form and you are good to go !

    This was not my experience, but that of my Partner, and he came home so ebullient, I have sat him…read moredown and made intensive enquiries about his Corporate experience with them. He gave it a hands down 10 stars out of 5! Mal and his team had organised a three day conference, and they wanted to finish on a high note. They decided that volunteering would provide that outlet. One of the experiences Oz Harvest offer, is, for groups or Corporations to pay $175.00 (+ GST) a head to have a three hour cooking and tasting experience. The group of 24 people showed up and were divided into teams, each team was assigned a chef, who instructed them in hygiene, basic knife skills, basic commercial kitchen skills ("Hot Behind" no knives in the sink, etc.) Each team had a different menu to cook. A team may have 1 to 4 dishes to prepare over a three hour period, using ingredients that would otherwise have been put to waste, but will now be distributed to the homeless. (Pretty cool, Huh?) Mal said that there was a huge amount of laughter and camaraderie generated during the experience, and they prepared about 250 meals that afternoon. They also got to sample what they had made once they had finished. They kept the apron that they were given, and most people bought the Oz Harvest Cook Book, that has recipes from just about every Chef and Celebrity Chef you have ever heard of. I know I said I did not need another cook book, ever, but I am so glad Mal's colleague gave him one! The purchase of the book provides 120 meals. (Go on..Jump on the website and buy one, you know you want to!) Mal said it was one of the most thoroughly "Feel Good" things he has ever done in a team building exercise. I would encourage any of you to suggest this activity if you ever have input into Team Building activities. Obviously, of course, you can just volunteer for all other sorts of things, that do not require you paying anything!

    Norton Plaza Community Kitchen Garden

    Norton Plaza Community Kitchen Garden

    (1 review)

    $

    Leichhardt

    As someone with little to no gardening knowledge/skills/motivation, with tight purse-strings and an…read moreappetite for fresh food, I love Norton Plaza Community Kitchen Garden. I often thought that the 'Community Kitchen Garden' signs around Norton Plaza were simply alluding to the couple of planter boxes sitting outside Coles. Then, one day, I decided to follow the signs up the lift to the Level 2 rooftop, where I stumbled upon something lovely. Through the doors and on to the roof I found an open space filled with many more planter boxes full of fresh herbs, fruit & vegetables. Looking around for 'the catch' or waiting for someone to shoo me away from this utopian secret garden I wasn't meant to have stumbled upon, all I found was the inscription "Enjoy, respect and care for our plants as you would your own." When I hesitated still, a man with gardening gloves smiled at me with the hint of a chuckle (pretty sure my mouth had dropped open a little). "Go for it," he said and nodded towards the boxes of parsley and thyme. Catering to kids, this would be a fantastic place to bring your children shopping and indeed to let them enjoy the process of picking fresh produce. It's a fantastic initiative to get kids interested in gardening and to promote kids enjoying and even cooking healthy meals. This place is great if like many inner city houses, you don't have a backyard fit for a garden but like to enjoy fresh home-grown produce - for free. Because what do they want in return? Nothing. The Norton Plaza Community Kitchen Garden is made for the locals, by the locals. They just ask that you make the most of this fantastic commodity and that, if you have the time, you give a little lovin' back in return, in the form community working bees or by joining their Gardening Volunteer Club.

    Green Living Centre - nonprofit - Updated June 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...