Ingredient bins, waste bins and storage bins keep dry goods rotated, food waste contained and back-of-house compliant with HACCP and council recycling requirements. Hospitality Connect stocks the working range from Cambro, Vogue, Trust and Edesa — across rolling ingredient bins, mobile waste bins, separated recycling stations and bench-top waste chutes.
Range overview
- Mobile ingredient bins (Cambro Camslide): Wheeled hopper bins for flour, sugar, rice — sealed lid prevents pest contamination.
- Stackable storage bins: 27L, 47L, 81L wheeled bins for back-of-house dry goods rotation.
- Waste bins (mobile): 60L, 120L, 240L wheelie bins for kitchen and external waste; council-certified colours.
- Recycling separation stations: Multi-bin stations with colour-coded lids for general waste, recycling, organics and glass.
- Bench waste chutes: Drop-in stainless waste chutes for counter trim and prep work.
Material and sizing
Food-grade polyethylene is the working material — non-staining, dishwasher-safe and tolerant of HACCP sanitisers. Stainless-steel waste bins suit front-of-house and reception areas where appearance matters. Match bin size to your waste cycle — undersized bins overflow before pickup; oversized bins waste floor space and slow rotation. Standard cafe waste runs 200–400L per day; restaurants run 500L–1500L. Council pickup schedules dictate minimum capacity.
Use cases and rotation
- FIFO labelling: Date-stamp bins on receipt; rotate front-to-back to prevent dead stock.
- Sealing for pest control: Tight-lid ingredient bins keep weevils and rodents out of dry goods.
- Clean and sanitise weekly: Even unopened bins build up residue at the lid and rim.
- Colour-code by stream: Red for general, yellow for recycling, green for organics — train staff once, not weekly.
- Mobile vs static: Wheels add cost but save backs and reduce spillage during empty cycles.
HACCP requires labelled, FIFO-rotated bins; council recycling rules add colour-coded waste streams. The simplest working setup: clear-lid food storage bins for dry goods (allows visual inventory), red lids for general waste, yellow for recycling, green for organics. Mobile bins with locking castors save backs during empty cycles and spillage during transport — worth the extra $40–80 per bin for back-of-house. Train staff once on stream allocation; print a chart inside the bin lid for new starters. Schedule weekly bin sanitisation to prevent residue build-up at the rim. Specifier note for new fitouts: design dedicated bin storage zones into the kitchen layout from day one — bins clutter walking aisles when they're an afterthought. Allocate 1.5–2 square metres for back-of-house bin storage in a 100-cover venue, scaling up for higher-volume operations.
Pair with
Round out back-of-house with commercial shelving, disposable boxes and dishwashing & cleaning for hygiene chemicals.