Our heartfelt gratitude to Sugarcube Studios, for bringing our guides to life – designing a map for us and creating such joyful imagery to go with it!
Lots of pantry staples – from flours, grains and rice, through to condiments, spices, legumes, nuts, seeds and liquid foods – usually come in single-use packets. These shops stock all manner of pantry foods loose in bulk bins (or operate return & refill systems for their packaging), allowing you to put these goods straight into your own bags, jars, containers and bottles, and skip the packaging!
Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie – offers a wide array of dried food in bulk bins (including, but not limited to, nuts, seeds, cereals, grains, flours, legumes, herbs and spices), liquid foods on tap (including vinegars, oils, tamari and honey), and even loose frozen goods, including frozen veges and berries – BYO containers/bags!
GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro – a mostly packaging-free store stocking a wide range of unpackaged dried foods, such as grains, flours, nuts, seeds, legumes, dried fruit, spices, sweets and snacks, as well as a decent selection of liquid foods, including oils, syrups and vinegars. You can also get harder to find things like vege stock, pasta and cocoa butter (to name a few).
Yum Jar – a zero waste meal box service (like My Food Bag or HelloFresh, but without the rubbish!) delivered throughout Wellington City, Hutt Valley and Porirua. They also stock some pantry goods that you can add to your meal kit order, like nutritional yeast, TVP, snack bars and other sweets and snacks. You get all your ingredients in jars and containers that you return to YumJar to be sterilised and reused! The ice packs and cardboard boxes that might come with your delivery are also collected back by YumJar for reuse. This business is so super waste conscious that they produce only about 1kg of landfill waste every week, while providing over 1000 meals. Amazing!
The Spicery, 25 Tennyson Street, Te Aro – stocks a wide range of unpackaged dried food in bulk bins, including spices, grains, nuts, seeds, flours and legumes.
Newtown Green Grocer, 100 Riddiford Street, Newtown – good range of affordable bulk bins stocking grains, legumes, spices, snacks, nuts, seeds, dried fruit.
Manga the Foodstore, 218 Riddiford Street, Newtown – another great range of dried foods at very affordable prices. Unfortunately, a couple of years back Manga decided to remove their bulk bins in favour of pre-packing their goods in ziplock plastic bags. However, they were happy for us to continue bringing our own bags and containers to fill either directly from out back of the shop or from their ziplock bags which they then reused. It’s always worth asking!
The Spice Emporium, 31 Coutts Street, Kilbirnie – stocks a wide range of unpackaged dried food in bulk bins, including grains, flours and legumes.
The Nut Store, 284 Cuba Street, Te Aro – quality nuts, seeds, fruit and spices sourced as locally as possible. Most things are pre-packed in cellophane (which is compostable), but if you drop off your own bags outside of their peak lunch hours (11am-2pm), they can fill them up for you to pick up later – just let them know the quantities you require.
Moore Wilson’s, corner of Tory Street and College Street, Te Aro – most bulk items are packaged here, but they do sell large brown paper bags full of different flour and huge glass jars of olives and the like which you can stock up on. An industrious person on our FB page also noted that Moore Wilson’s sells 1kg blocks of fresh brewer’s yeast wrapped in paper – you can cut this into cubes, freeze in 2 tsp portions and when you need it, defrost ahead of time and use as you would dried yeast – wow!
Narayan Spices n Food, 10/6 McMillan Court, Newlands – stocks a good selection of bulk bin spices, condiments, grains, legumes, seeds, nuts, dried fruit, just BYO bags!
Supermarkets – all major supermarkets in Wellington have well stocked bulk bin/pick and mix sections with wholefoods (BYO bags for these). However they’re pretty expensive, often more so than equivalent ingredients in packets (bah!), and more so than the bulk bins at places like Commonsense Organics or GoodFor.
The following shops sell unpackaged meat, sausages, smallgoods, seafood, cheese and/or deli foods and will happily put these straight into a BYO container – woohoo!
Preston’s Master Butchers, Torrens Terrace, Wellington – happy to put unpackaged cuts of meat into a BYO container (in fact, encourage it), but they do note that once something has been placed in a container, it can’t be taken out again (so no changing your mind about the weight you want at the last minute!!)
Baron Hasselhoff’s, 470 Adelaide Road, Berhampore – This local chocolate producer loves it when you BYO containers to their store for unpackaged chocolate in their display counter!
The Mediterranean Food Warehouse, 42 Constable St, Newtown, Wellington – BYO containers for the deli food, ranging from savoury treats, like olives and pesto, through to sweet delicacies, like turkish delight and very fancy chocolate. Mmm…
Ontrays/Scheckter’s Deli, 34 Johnsonville Road, Johnsonville – BYO containers to fill up unpackaged goodies at the deli, including cheese and cured meats.
Nino’s Fish Boat at The Harbourside Market (outside Te Papa on Sundays) – accepts BYO containers for unpackaged fish!
Johnsonville Fish Supply, 11 Johnsonville Road, Johnsonville
Unpackaged live mussels/whole fish – there are a few stores around town that stock unpackaged live mussels and/or whole fish at self-serve counters. We put them straight into upcycled ice cream containers/BYO containers rather than the plastic bags the stores usually provide. You can find mussels and fish at PAK’nSAVE Kilbirnie, 98 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie; and just mussels at Woolworths Newtown, 3 John Street, Newtown;New World Wellington City, 279 Wakefield Street, Wellington; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; New World Newlands, Cnr Newlands Road and Bracken Road, Newlands.
Supermarket delis – Most supermarkets have a deli section offering unpackaged meat, seafood, olives and other antipasti, salads, lunch foods and more. All Woolworths, New World and PAK’nSAVE supermarkets officially allow you to BYO container for these goods!
The following stores bake and sell unpackaged bread and bakery goods (in some of these stores some items might be pre-packed or wrapped in cling film, just avoid those things!). Simply BYO bread bag to put the bread/bakery goods into. Some places will bag up their bread later in the day, so you want to get in there before they do that (i.e. before 1pm).
Shelley Bay Bakery, Unit 6/g, 14 Leeds Street, Te Aro; 143 Karori Road, Karori; & 133A Park Road, Miramar, Wellington
Moore Wilson’s Fresh, corner of Tory and College Streets, Te Aro – stocks a range of locally baked bread unpackaged.
Most supermarkets (and even some Four Squares) stock unpackaged bread, bread rolls and/or bakery goods in their bakery section – just pop them into your BYO bags!
Markets – No two ways about it, if you want to get a good source of unpackaged (often locally grown), produce, markets are the place to go! BYO bags to get fresh produce from large markets at Newtown School and Tawa on Saturdays, or at the Habourside market outside Te Papa on Sundays. For a smaller range of local, organic produce and artisan products, check out the Thorndon Farmers’ Market (aka Hill Street Farmers’ Market) on Saturday mornings. By and large, we’ve found that markets, where you can meet the grower/producer face-to-face, are really great for starting fruitful conversations about waste-free food, and developing relationships and systems that enable you to get your favourite fruit, vege and preserves without the packaging. Many of the Wellington markets have local producers of pre-made foods like tofu, noodles, preserves etc. Have a chat to see if you can leave containers with the stall holders for them to fill with your desired product for you to pick up from them the following week, or if the stallholder uses glass jars for packaging, ask whether they will take their empty glass jars back for sterilisation and reuse.
Kaicycyle Farm Whānau – if you want access to local, regeneratively grown, seasonal produce, then signing up to Kaicycle Farm Whānau might be for you! Through this system you pay a monthly fee and this entitles you to pick your own kai from their farm once a week (as well as a bunch of other discounts and benefits! Think of it like an allotment scheme, but without having to do any growing, just the harvest 😉 From a zero waste perspective, it’s perfect because your BYO bags/containers to pick your own. Find out more or sign up here.
Veggie boxes/co-ops – there are lots of fruit, veg + food co-ops around town from whom you can order your veggies each week. Wellington Region Fruit & Vege Co-op is a great affordable option (a pack costs $15 a week), the packs are completely free of single-use packaging, and customers are encouraged to remember their own reusable bags when they pick-up their packs. There are pick-up locations across the whole Wellington Region – check their website for the location closest to you. Around the country we’ve found that unless co-ops have a zero waste policy, the fruit and veg will usually be pre-packed, so it’s essential to contact them before ordering and have a conversation about whether the co-op is willing to use reusable bags for your box, or to leave things unpackaged (you may be the first person who’s ever asked, so always good to plant the seed!). Generally, if it’s a local operation, it should be possible to arrange this. If it’s not possible to arrange, we recommend looking elsewhere or simply getting unpackaged fruit, vege and other staples from markets and other stores.
Look out for places that sell whole or ground coffee beans unpackaged, and bring your own bag and container to fill. Going direct to coffee roasters is the best option, but you can also look out for bulk dispensers of coffee in other stores. Here are some spots we found:
Raglan Roastat multiple locations – 40 Abel Smith Street; 156 Willis Street; Chaffers Dock, 18 Herd Street; 12 Holland Street; and 90 The Terrace, Wellington
Rich Coffee, 27/369 Adelaide Road, Newtown – roastery open Saturdays. You can also get Rich Coffee delivered to your door via a glass jar swap system! Your first order will include the price of the jar, but you simply swap your empty jar for a full one next time you order.
We avoid teabags as most have plastic in them, which we don’t want in our tea or our soil. Using loose leaf tea is an easy way to get around this. The trick is to find somewhere that sells loose leaf tea packaging-free, so you can put the leaves straight into BYO jars/containers! You’ll find loose tea leaves in bulk dispensers at:
GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro
Commonsense Organics,147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie
The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD (ask at the counter to have them put into BYO jars/containers).
Sourcing cow’s milk without the plastic bottles or non-dairy milk without the dreaded Tetra-pak is no mean feat! We’ve found the following options:
Glass bottle return/swap scheme for dairy milk – How does the system work? The first time you buy a bottle of milk, you pay a little extra to cover the cost of the bottle and to ensure that you return it when you’re done. Return empty bottles to the store of purchase and exchange it for a full bottle for only the price of the milk (or else get your deposit back). The empties are then sterilised and refilled – so the bottles just go around and around – true zero waste! There are several different milk brands in reusable bottles that are available across Wellington City, we’ve listed some and where they are available. However, stockists are continually expanding, so check the stockist lists on the websites if you can’t see anywhere near you below:
Eketahuna Country Meatsmilk available at: Aro Mini Mart, Aro Valley; Gambonis Deli, Karori; Kingston Foodmarket, Kingston; Moore Wilsons, cnr of Tory/College Streets, Te Aro, Wellington; Ngaio Supermarket & Lotto, Ngaio; Strathmore Food Market, Strathmore
Three Oaks Organicmilk available at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie
Cow’s milk delivery in reusable glass bottles:
Eketahuna Country Meats do home delivery of milk in reusable glass bottles (just like the old days!) across the Wellington Region – to check out which day they deliver to your area, you’ll need to begin the registration process on their website. You’ll have milk delivered to your door in reusable glass bottles (just like the old days!) – leave your empty bottles out on the next delivery day so they can be returned to Eketahuna Country Meats for sterilisation and refill. YAY!
Look out for places that sell beer on tap and BYO bottles/flagons to fill up. Breweries are awesome, but lots of liquor stores offer this option too! We found beer on tap at:
Any of Wellington’s craft breweries!! Check out the extensive list here.
Also, don’t forget that most liquor stores do ‘swappa crates’ of beer – i.e. crates of twelve 745ml bottles of classic NZ beer (e.g. Lion Red/Brown, Speights, Tui, Export Gold etc.) which can be returned (when the bottles are empty) and are then sent back to the brewery for sterilisation and refill (a better outcome for glass bottles than recycling because reusing the same bottle over and over requires way less energy and resources than recycling).
Drinking Chocolate – get cocoa powder from a bulk bin at GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro or Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie
Kombucha – the awesome locally made KB Kombucha sells various flavours of their kombucha on tap (just BYO bottle!) at their bar, Rumours Bar, 64 Inglewood Place, Taranaki Street. Alternatively, you can buy their pre-packaged kombucha in a variety of sizes – it’s all packaged into reusable glass bottles that you can return to KB Kombucha when empty and they wash and reuse them. Also BYO bottles to get kombucha on tap at GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro.
NB: Many of the below items are stocked by The Hippie Straw – a local Wellington business focused on affordable reusables. They’ve got an online shop, but to avoid packaging cost/waste, find them and their products in person at the Harbourside Market on Sundays, and at the Wellington Underground Market on Jervois Quay.
Reusable drinking vessels (cups and water bottles)
Say “no more” to disposable takeaway coffee cups and plastic water bottles by getting yourself reusables instead! Get reusable water bottles at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie (metal); Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD (metal); Iko Iko, 118 Cuba Street, Te Aro (metal); Vessel, 87 Victoria Street, Wellington CBD (metal); Wellworks Pharmacy, 75 Taranaki Street, Wellington (metal); Life Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 26 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; Tea Pea, 22 Ganges Road, Khandallah; The Gift Shack, 4/210 Main Road, Tawa (metal).
There are heaps of places to buy reusable takeaway coffee cups in Wellington: Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; The Mediterranean Food Warehouse, 42 Constable St, Newtown, Wellington; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; Moore Wilson’s, corner of Tory and College Streets, Te Aro; Made-It, 103 Victoria Street, Wellington CBD; Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD; Village Green, 14 Ganges Road, Khandallah; Wellworks Pharmacy, 75 Taranaki Street, Wellington; The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD (locally made); Iko Iko, 118 Cuba Street, Te Aro; The Sugar Trade, 14 Collins Avenue, Linden; The Gift Shack, 4/210 Main Road, Tawa; The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown; as well as at most cafes and coffee roasters.
Reusable lunch boxes/containers
Reusable lunch boxes or containers are great to have on you when you’re out and about in case you want to get takeaways, to carry leftovers home with you, or if you find food to forage. You can get stainless steel lunchboxes and food containers from NZ companies like Meals in Steel, Bento Ninja and Nil from stores such as Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and Tea Pea, 22 Ganges Road, Khandallah. You can get reusable cutlery cloth holders at Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore.
Reusable bags (shopping bags, produce bags and bulk bin bags)
Plastic shopping bags are a menace, but so too are those plastic produce bags for fruit and vege or the plastic bags often offered alongside bulk bins at bulk stores. You can avoid them by bringing your own bags or buying a set of reusable produce bags. You can get other varieties of 100% cotton produce and/or bulk bin bags at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and Natty, 476 Adelaide Road, Berhampore.
Reusable straws
Say “no straw thanks” next time you order a drink out and either use your mouth to drink, or get yourself a reusable metal straw instead. If you’re keen on a reusable metal straw, you can get them from Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; and The Gift Shack, 4/210 Main Road, Tawa.
Alternatives to plastic cling wrap, plastic sandwich bags and tin foil
Beeswax wrap
Purchase at – both beeswax and vegan wraps at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie (the Munch brand); Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington (Lily Bee Wrap brand);Iko Iko, 118 Cuba Street, Te Aro (Munch brand); Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD (Honeywrap brand); Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown; Natty, 476 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; Unichem Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 37 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; PAK’nSAVE Kilbirnie, 98 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie; and The Gift Shack, 4/210 Main Road, Tawa.
DIY – it’s way cheaper! You just need to get natural fibre fabric (cotton) and unpackaged beeswax. Keep an eye out at secondhand stores and fabric stores for off-cuts of cotton, or see if you can get some upcycled natural fibre fabric from Vinnies Re Sew, Mezzanine Level, St Vincent De Paul’s, 32 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie or see whether there’s anything appropriate in the reject fabric bundles from Te Aro Zero Waste, 2 Forrester’s Lane, Te Aro, Wellington). Get unpackaged beeswax at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Made Marion Craft, 166 Cuba St, Te Aro; and The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD.
Reusable sandwich bags – you can get Munch reusable sandwich bags and/or wraps from Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; and Zealandia Store, 53 Waiapu Rd, Kārori.
Reusable pot/bowl covers – a good option for storing leftovers in a bowl (other than just putting a plate on top!) is a reusable fabric cover, which can be found at Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore. Silicone covers can also be a good alternative to tin foil for roasting (if they are the covers marketed to withstand temperatures of up to 220 degrees and will also keep hot food warm when transporting) – you can buy these at Vessel, 87 Victoria Street, Wellington CBD.
Silicone freezer bags – reusable bags for freezing meat and other food are available at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and Life Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 26 Bay Road, Kilbirnie – they’re pricey, but will last your lifetime and can replace soft plastics for freezing.
Refills of cleaning products
The following stores stock a range of liquid and/or powdered cleaning products in bulk dispensers that you can fill your own bottles/containers with:
You can find dishbrushes with wooden handles and removable + replaceable, home compostable heads at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Vessel, 87 Victoria Street, Wellington CBD; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown.
Also, you can get wooden veggie brushes with plant fibre bristles which can also be used as dishbrushes (they just don’t have a handle) at Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie – as these are made only of bamboo and plant fibre, they’re home compostable should they ever wear down.
We also encourage people to move away from using dishclothes, sponges and bench wipes made out of synthetic material (as these leach microfibres and they’re also destined for landfill when they wear down) and to use natural fibre cloths instead:
For something more like a traditional dishcloth sponge, check out the SPRUCE, Wet-it!,Munch and other brands of 100% cotton + cellulose dishcloth sponges (home compostable at the end of their life) which are available at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; Natty, 476 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and PAK’nSAVE Kilbirnie, 98 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie.
100% cotton dishcloths (or 100% cotton clothes that can be used as dishcloths) are sold at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown; Tea Pea, 22 Ganges Road, Khandallah; The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD (subject to availability as they are handknitted by a local); and Vessel, 87 Victoria Street, Wellington CBD.
If you’re after a coarser scrubby, you can get loofa, natural scourer or 100% coconut fibre coarse scrubby from Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; and Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore.
Laundry
Eco Planetand Earthwise laundry powders come in a cardboard box with a cardboard scoop (or no scoop at all for Earthwise!) – no plastic lining! You can get both at New World Wellington City, 279 Wakefield Street, Wellington; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; New World Newtown, 195 Riddiford Street, Newtown; PAK’nSAVE Kilbirnie, 98 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie; Four Square Hataitai, 1 Moxham Avenue, Hataitai; New World Newlands, corner of Newlands Road and Bracken Road, Newlands; and New World Tawa, 35 Oxford Street, Tawa.
You can also get Living Greenlaundry powder, which is in just cardboard and brown paper (also septic tank safe) with a bamboo scoop, from (almost) any Countdown supermarket.
Laundry/dish soap bars (and metal soap shakers to go with the bars) – Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; The Axe, 193 Adelaide Road, Newtown; and Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore.
Non-plastic clothes pegs – bamboo and/or stainless steel pegs available at Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; New World Tawa, 35 Oxford Street, Tawa; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; and Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore.
Ingredients for DIY cleaning products
Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington offers refills on a wide range of ingredients for DIY cleaning/bathroom products and is worth checking out as a starting point
Baking soda – available unpackaged in bulk bins at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington.
White Vinegar –sold on tap at Commonsense Organics; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; and Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington.
Essential Oils – get essential oils in reusable glass bottles you can return when empty for return to the producer for washing and reuse at South Coast Collective, 93a Aro Street, Aro Valley, Wellington
Castile soap – available on tap at Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington
NB: Many of the below items are stocked by The Hippie Straw – a local Wellington business focused on affordable reusables. They’ve got an online shop, but to avoid packaging cost/waste, find them and their products in person at the Harbourside Market on Sundays, and at the Wellington Underground Market on Jervois Quay.
Zero waste teeth and mouth
Bamboo toothbrushes – a great alternative to plastic toothbrushes because they have wooden, home compostable handles (though bristles are still plastic and need to be removed from the handle and put in a rubbish bin). You can find bamboo toothbrushes at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD; Foursquare Kelburn, 97 Upland Road, Kelburn; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington;Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; New World Wellington City, 279 Wakefield Street, Wellington; Wellworks Pharmacy, 75 Taranaki Street, Wellington; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; Unichem Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 37 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; and PAK’nSAVE Kilbirnie, 98 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie.
Dental Floss – Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD all stockfloss, which comes in a refillable glass or metal tube with a screw on metal lid and refills in a cardboard box are available once you finish the first batch so you don’t need to keep buying dispensers. NOTE – check the materials of the brand that is stocked. The WHITE floss are usually made of 100% silk and is home compostable (black floss is usually a bamboo-plastic composite so is landfill only).
Toothpaste and mouthwash – you can get locally made toothpaste, tooth powder, tooth tabs and mouthwash by Solid Oral Care – all their products come in glass jars and bottles that you return when empty and these are then returned to Solid and get sterilised and reused! Find Solid at Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore. An extremely exciting thing is that you can also get Solid toothpaste on tap into your own container at Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington – this is not only cheaper, it’s infinitely more fun!! At Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD you can get a variety of natural toothpastes made by Kerikeri company Nature Body, which come in glass jars that you can return to Nature Body, when empty, for sterilisation and refill.
Unpackaged Bars of Soap
It’s easy to get soap without packaging in Wellington. The following stores sell totally naked bars of soap:
We’d encourage you to get your everyday toiletries – from shampoo through to shaving soap – in bar form, which means you totally avoid the plastic/aluminium bottles that liquid products usually come in!
Many places stock the popular Ethique range which includes shampoo bars, conditioner bars, shaving bars, deodorant bars, moisturiser bars, etc. (all of Ethique‘s bars come in home compostable packaging): Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Cre8tiveworx, 217 Cuba Street, Wellington CBD; Wellworks Pharmacy, 75 Taranaki Street, Wellington; Farmers, 206-218 Lambton Quay; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; and46-54 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; Life Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 26 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; Simon’s Pharmacy, 189 Main Rd, Tawa; and many supermarkets.
If you’re into an all-in-one bar, you can get the Global Soap Shave, Shampoo and Body bar made with beer (:-D) from Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie.
Check out local company Underground Soaperywho make shampoo bars (among other things) – you can buy their products online, or find them at one of the markets in the Wellington region.
A couple of Wellington shops stock deodorant, dry shampoo, lip balm and/or sunscreen in compostable cardboard tubes. Brands like Nature Body, Aotearoad, and No.8 Essentials are sold at The Minimal Co, 24 Elizabeth Street, Mount Victoria; The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD; Hopper – Refill, Shop & Cafe, 11 Hopper Street, Te Aro, Wellington City; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; and Unichem Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 37 Bay Road, Kilbirnie.
Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington stocks a range of toiletries bars and is worth checking out
Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore stocks the full range of Nil toiletries bars
Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie – as well as the above, Commonsense also stock shampoo, conditioner and shaving bars made by Jeymar Soap & Bodyand Frankie Apothecary.
GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro – also stocks Fair + Squareface cleansing, body and pet wash bars.
Reusable Menstrual Products
There are zero waste, low cost alternatives to disposable sanitary items like tampons and pads.
Menstrual cups – stocked at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Unichem Cuba Mall, 122 Cuba Mall, Wellington; Wellworks Pharmacy, 75 Taranaki Street, Wellington; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro; New World Wellington City, 279 Wakefield Street, Wellington; New World Thorndon, 150 Molesworth Street, Thorndon; Unichem Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 37 Bay Road, Kilbirnie; and Life Pharmacy Kilbirnie, 26 Bay Road, Kilbirnie.
Reusable, washable pads and period-proof underwear is available at Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie
Shaving
Avoid plastic shavers that are designed to be disposable and go for 100% metal razors that will last you decades and only require the 100% metal and recyclable blades to be replaced (or sharpened with a leather strop!), and remember to use a bar of shaving soap instead of shaving foam that comes in an aerosol can (see above) – note, you’ll need a shaving brush to make this work. You can buy razors, replacement blades and shaving brushes from Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore; and Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie.
Liquid Toiletries on Tap
The following stores stock a range of liquid bathroom products on tap that you can refill your own bottles with:
Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington – stocks a wide range of Ecostore products on tap, as well as other brands.
Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie also stocks Ecostore liquid bathroom products on tap.
GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro
Nil Showroom, 471 Adelaide Road, Berhampore – Ecostore products on tap
Ingredients for DIY Toiletries/Cosmetics
Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington stocks heaps of ingredients for DIY cosmetics/toiletries in refill – worth checking out to start with
Baking Soda is an essential ingredient in lots of homemade toiletries such as toothpaste and deodorant. You can get it unpackaged in bulk from Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro.
You can also get unpackaged beeswax from Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie; Made Marion Craft, 166 Cuba St, Te Aro; The Wellington Apothecary, 110a Cuba Mall, Wellington CBD
Other
Sunscreen – You can get locally-made Smidge sunscreen in refill at Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington.
Moisturiser:KD One, 220A Main Road, Tawa, make their own moisturiser and you can return the dispenser for re-use.
Cotton Buds – get reusable cotton buds from Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington
Toilet Paper – Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street, Wellington stocks unpackaged individual rolls of toilet paper; Commonsense Organics, 147 Tory Street, Te Aro; 37 Rongotai Rd, Kilbirnie stocks Greencane and Bambaloo toilet paper (which comes in fully home compostable packaging). GoodFor, 23 Jessie Street, Te Aro both stocks With Small toilet paper (also packaging in fully home compostable packaging).
Reuse and Recycle
Food waste and composting – food waste in a bin gets sent to landfill where it breaks down anaerobically, producing methane (a potent greenhouse gas). No! Here are some alternatives:
Home composting/worm farms/bokashi – Having a composting, worm farm or bokashi bin system at home is the best and cheapest way to deal with your food scraps. If you’d like help setting one up or working out what the best system would be for you, organisations like Sustainability Trust in Wellington City, Cannons Creek Community Pantry in Cannons Creek, the Green Gardener in Kāpiti, and various community gardens around the region offer composting workshops.
Food scrapcollections –If you’re in Wellington City, consider signing up to have your food waste picked up by Kaicyclefor a fee – your scraps will then be composted and used to grow food at Kaicycle’s urban farm. If you are a business, you can sign up to Kaicycle too, or you can also sign up to have your food waste picked up by Kai to Compost or Organic Waste Management, both of whom take the food scraps to be commercially composted at the Southern Landfill (not dumped in the big hole in the ground!). Organic Waste Management services Lower Hutt and Porirua as well as Wellington City.
Dropping off your food scraps somewhere – If you’d like to break the food down yourself but haven’t got a garden to put into, you can buy your own bokashi bin and deliver the juices yourself to Kaicycle‘s urban farm, for free. OR, check if you can drop food scraps off at the compost bin in your local community garden. For example, if you live in Mount Vic, you’re welcome to drop your food scraps off to the compost at Innermost Gardens, or in Hataitai you can drop your scraps at the Hataitai Community Garden at the old Hataitai Bowling Club. There’s also a community compost at Aro Valley.
Edible business food waste – food that is still edible that goes to waste is a crying shame. Across the Wellington region there are some really excellent food redistribution services that are rescuing food from businesses that is not good enough to sell, but is still good enough to eat, and redistributing it to social justice organisations who can pass it on to people who need it most. These excellent organisations include Kaibosh (Wellingon City and Lower Hutt), The Free Store (Wellington City), The Share Shack(Aro Valley), Kiwi Community Assistance (Tawa) and Waiwaste (Wairarapa). So if you’re a business with extra food at the end of the day, consider getting in touch with one of these organisations. Also, a shout out to The Free Store, which is working on making its operation zero waste (!) – businesses that work with The Free Store can help them achieve this goal by not repackaging up the food they donate to the organisation.
E-waste – electronic waste is the world’s fastest growing waste stream, with huge environmental implications because of the toxins that can be leached from this waste, but also the loss of incredibly precious resources embedded in these items that are not recovered when the waste is dumped in landfill.
Repair –Rather than throwing you broken electronics out – have you considered trying to get them repaired first? You could pay someone to do it. For example, LT Campbell, 128 Tory St are excellent for appliance repairs. Looking for parts? The Recycle Centre and Second Treasures Shop takes apart broken gadgets and appliances and sells them or their usable parts on their Trademe account – it’s worth a good look! Also Selwyn Andrews in Kelburn (selwynandrews@hotmail.com) repairs various stereo items, does PAT testing and iPhone screen replacements, in addition to general appliance repairs, at very competitive rates. If you’d like to try your own hand at repairing your things, consider going along to a Repair or Fix-itCafe where experts donate their time to fix people’s broken items for free at a designated repair event (usually run by community centres, churches or councils). The Newtown Tool Library runs these semi-regularly, as does the Carterton Fix It Lab.
Recycle – If your electronics really have given up the ghost, rather than chucking them out, take them to be recycled responsibly. You can do this at the Sustainability Trust‘s EcoShop, 2 Forrester’s Lane, Te Aro, Wellington; the Recycle Centre and Second Treasures Shop, at the Wellington Southern Landfill; Trash Palace, Broken Hill Road, Porirua; Earthlink, 25 Peterkin St, Wingate, Lower Hutt; Masterton, Carterton & Martinborough Transfer Stations (these drop-offs are FREE); or Wairarapa Resource Centre, 8 King Street, Masterton. For some of these items, you will have to pay to recycle them (until the Government starts to regulate manufacturers of these products), but it’s a small cost relative to damage these items otherwise cause in landfill. E-waste drop offs for recycling is FREE at the Masterton, Carterton & Martinborough transfer stations.
Tip Shops/Recycling + Reuse Shops – For all your recycling and reusing needs, look out for reuse shops at local landfills. There’s the Recycle Centre and Second Treasures Shop, at the Wellington Southern Landfill, Landfill Road (off Happy Valley Road); Trash Palace, Broken Hill Road, Porirua; Earthlink, 25 Peterkin St, Wingate, Lower Hutt; Ā Mua Community Resource Centre in Paetūmōkai/Featherston; and Wairarapa Resource Centre, 8 King Street, Masterton. If you’ve got a hard-to-recycle item or something that’s still functional but which you no longer want, rather than chucking such things out, take them to one of these reuse shops and see if they’ll accept them. The Second Treasures Shop has loads of great items for sale on their Trademe account – it’s worth a good look! Furthermore, if you’re ever in need of a new one-off purchase – from materials for a home fit-out, cuts of wood, building materials, through to cutlery, appliances, furniture or other knick knacks – consider coming to shop here first, before going to buy something new. You might be amazed by what you find (and the low cost)…
Zero Waste Information and Support Networks
Waste-ed – a local social enterprise formed to educate and advocate around waste consciousness in Wellington City. Waste-ed runs heaps of workshops, events, information sessions, and campaigns that provide information and solutions for Wellington’s waste, as well as actions individuals can take to reduce waste in their own lives. Waste-ed also has an online shop selling locally-made products that help with low-waste living (like reusable snack bags, cutlery wallets and beeswax wraps). Check out their website, which has heaps of resources and listings for upcoming waste-related events.
Zero Waste Wellington, Zero Waste Wairarapa, Waste Free Kapiti Facebook pages/groups – these are great forums for sharing ideas about low-waste living in the local area, seeking tips or recommendations, or staying on top of local activities and actions that you might like to be a part of. Worth signing up to if you are a Facebook user.
Plastic Free Kāpiti – a Facebook page set up by Paekākāriki local Rachel Benefield who lives plastic free with her family of 5. The page intends to support households and individuals aiming to live without plastic.
Para Kore – Para Kore is an amazing organisation working with marae, kura and Māori institutions and businesses to transition towards zero waste. Their resources/services are free and their regional kaiārahi are totally fabulous. Para Kore’s Kaiārahi for Te Upoko o te Ika is Te Kawa Robb – if you’re keen for some awhi with waste reduction, he’d be stoked to hear from you ?
Share and Exchange
Toy Libraries – reduce the wasteful over-consumption of toys and save money by joining a toy library! Check out this guide to find the nearest Toy Library to you.
Tool Libraries – no need for every person and his or her dog to own a set of tools when we can all share them and reduce the over-duplication of resources. There’s a tool library in Newtown, and a tool library in Cannons Creek run by the Cannons Creek Community Pantry.
The Share Shackin Aro Valley – as well as a place you can get free rescued food that’s still good to eat, The Share Shack has a bunch of stuff for free like clothes, books, toys and lots of other household items and bits and bobs. There’s even a wall of ‘boomerang’ tools – just borrow and bring back. You can donate unwanted items in good condition to The Share Shack too.
Crop Swap – At a crop swap, individuals who have veges or seedlings they’ve grown, preserves or baking they’ve made (or similar), or even home-made knitting/crochet (etc.) crafts (anything made or grown by your hands), come together once a fortnight or once a month, to trade their offerings without any money changing hands – all free! Just bring something to share and let the swapping begin! Trading homegrown or home created goodies with friends and locals means you can avoid all that packaging that often comes with a store setting. You can also have friendly chats about how to share goods without the waste. There’s a monthly crop swap in Wellington at the Newtown Cultural and Community Centre.
Timebanking – Through timebanking you can share skills and services without the exchange of money, making it a great way to reduce waste on a budget because you can harness skills of creating and repairing that exist in your community (repairing broken clothes or electronics, for example), or having someone pass these skills on to you (how to garden, how to build). Perhaps you have some of these skills already that you could pass on to someone else for time credits? The Wellington Timebank is thriving and well worth getting involved with, if you aren’t already! There are also timebanks in Lower Hutt, Porirua, Upper Hutt, Wairarapaand one running out of the Common Unity Project Aotearoa in Epuni.
The Sharing Shelf (outside The Petone Depot, 8/193 Jackson Street, Petone) – a wee shelf where anyone can come down and drop off produce, a book or some other useful item for someone else to take, for free! Likewise, anyone can take something they fancy. You don’t have to drop something off every time you pick something up – there are no formalities. The wonderful art of sharing means that excess produce doesn’t go to waste. Furthermore, items can be shared without excessive amounts of packaging.
Skills and Resourcefulness in Communities
Community gardens/urban planting – community gardens are an excellent way for residents to get kai without packaging, and to learn skills of growing food and setting up composts – both very useful skills for low-waste living. There are some great community gardens around the Greater Wellington Region, including 16 throughout Wellington City, 9 on the Kāpiti Coast, 9 in Lower Hutt, and about 5 in Upper Hutt! Another gem is the Petone Food Gardens Network which is guerilla gardening and planting edible food all around Petone – yay! Community gardens are always looking for volunteers to help out and come along to working bees, so if you are interested in picking up gardening skills, or if you are already a keen gardener and would like to have the opportunity to share your skill with others, consider getting involved with your local community garden.
Menzshed– there are Menzsheds throughout Wellington Region. Menzshed provides a great opportunity for men of all ages to share tools and a workspace (reducing the wasteful overduplication of these resources) and to pass on skills of woodworking and other trades. Menzsheds frequently offer communities the service of repairing broken items like furniture (at a small cost), work with upcycled material that might otherwise go to waste, and also create bespoke items for community and charitable purposes. Definitely look up your local!
Common Unity Project Aotearoa, 310 Waiwhetu Road, Epuni, Lower Hutt – the legend of CUPA spreads far and wide. We can say that it certainly goes above and beyond its reputation in real life. Community Unity Project Aotearoa is an absolutely incredible community centre that runs a huge range of projects that achieve many positive social outcomes, but which also advance zero waste ideas. The membership owned, on-site bulk store Common Grocer is a great example. The centre also runs a range of repurposing projects, rescuing materials that might otherwise go to waste and putting it to good use, for example, rescued timber which is available for purchase from the wood workshop for $1 a metre; and the Sew Good project that repurposes waste fabric into all manner of useful items (any person who is running a community project is welcome to come and take fabric from the fabric bank for a koha too). CUPA also raises organic seedlings which are available for purchase and is home to a seedbank, and they take care of a variety of community gardens, harvesting the goods and working with schools to use the produce for kids’ lunches! There’s also a bike workshop on site and a range of repurposed bicycles available for hire (either for koha or for an exchange of volunteering hours) and a sharing shed that will soon be home to things like camping gear that people can borrow (rather than having to buy new equipment). There are a thousand and one other projects that CUPA runs that achieve multiple positive outcomes, bringing the community together, sharing skills, having fun AND reducing waste. No wonder people all over the country are abuzz about this place! Definitely check it out
The Petone Depot, 8/193 Jackson Street, Petone – an awesome social enterprise in the heart of Petone that’s getting behind some great reducing initiatives, from supporting Boomerang Bags and the Petone Food Gardens Network, to hosting the monthly CreateSpace where locals who are into anything creative (including crafts, growing, repairing, and arts) can get together to share projects, brainstorm new ones, or have a chance to take part in one of the community’s creative projects (including sewing and growing).
Good House Keeping, 287 Cuba Street,is a great store focused on fostering DIY, mending and repairing. The store stocks all manner of items to help you get good at making and mending, to become more resourceful and chuck less stuff out! They’ve really thought about sustainable options in great detail (even supplying bike oil on tap – so you can refill BYO bottles!) Definitely check this store out next time you’re in town, and have a yarn with the owners Lisa or Mark about their tips for resourceful, sustainable living.
Mechanical Tempest, 224-234 Riddiford Street, Newtown – got a bike that needs fixing? Found a beat up bike somewhere that looked like it might be get chucked out if not for some TLC? Want to do a bike up to save it from landfill? Have no idea what to do or where to start? Check out Mechanical Tempest – a not-for-profit bike workshop space. Anyone can come and work on their bike here and learn the essential skills for doing so with the support of knowledgeable on-hand volunteers. Sharing tools and a space reduces waste, and getting up to scratch on bike repair techniques will save you money, and potentially also a bike that would otherwise get biffed.
Vinnies Re Sew, 32 Rongotai Road, Kilbirnie – a textile recycle/upcycling initiative running out of St Vincent De Paul’s in Kilbirnie. Re Sew takes donated clothing which is not good enough to sell from the Vinnies op shops across Wellington and salvages it as fabric and/or upcycles it. Apart from helping to divert tonnes of textiles from landfill, the programme also provides a place for anyone to come to learn how to sew or to hang out and be creative or to develop work training opportunities.
Pins ‘N’ Needles, 6 Perry Street, Masterton – got some broken clothes but not sure how to repair them? Bring them into Linda at Pins n Needles for repairing! Not only will your clothes be as good as new, but any waste fabric from the fixing process, Linda will upcycle into a new creation – thus reducing as much textile waste from landfill as possible. Awesome! You can even check out the store to buy upcycled clothing instead of buying new or even secondhand – the clothes Linda makes for children are just divine! If you’re keen to repair your clothes yourself but just need a bit advice, drop in to Pins n Needles because Linda will surely be able to point you in the right direction 🙂
Resilient Carterton – a fabulous umbrella organisation bringing together groups and people that are taking actions that improve resilience in the Carterton community. By and large, a more resilient, self-sufficient community with a thriving local economy is a less wasteful community that is more resourceful and less dependent on imports of packaged goods and cheap throwaways. Have a look at some of the groups, individuals and projects that Resilient Carterton is supporting and promoting.
Sewing, crafts, knitting, crochet – We’re of the view that sewing, crafts, knitting and crochet are all key skills for combating waste in our lives (whether it’s the ability to make your own produce bags and beeswax wraps, knit a dishcloth, or repair broken clothes). In Greater Wellington you can find great organisations where you can get involved to either learn or pass on those skills, complete community sewing projects, attend workshops, or simply complete your own sewing projects in the company of others. Great examples are the Sew Good Cooperative at the Common Unity Project Aotearoa, 310 Waiwhetu Road, Epuni, Lower Hutt or Vinnies Re Sew in Wellington City. Thimbles and Threads, 84 Main Street, Upper Hutt also runs lots of affordable sewing classes and is generally very supportive of low-waste, upcycling fabric initiatives! Joining a group that is sewing reusable bags to give out to the community is also a great way to learn to sew while helping to reduce plastic bag consumption and these groups are always looking for volunteers (regardless of whether or not you have prior sewing knowledge). For example, check out your local Boomerang Bags group – there are branches in Wellington City, Petone, Lower Hutt, Upper Hutt, Featherston, and Martinborough.
Hiya Imogen – yes, apparently there’s a guy at the Dixon Street Sunday Market who has a store selling noodles and tofu. All pre-packed at the stall, but if you leave him with a clearly labelled container, he’ll take it back with him and put your order of tofu in and bring it to the next market (so you need to be organised a week in advance to drop your containers off with him).
Kia ora, any recommendations as to which bulk bin shops listed above are most affordable? We’re making the switch from the supermarket but don’t want our food bills to go up. Cheers!
Hiya – in terms of the extent of price difference you are likely to see, it depends on your shopping habits right now. If you are shopping in the bulk bins at supermarkets, you will find that the bulk bins anywhere else you go are generally cheaper than the supermarket bins (even Commonsense bulk bins are cheaper than most supermarket bulk bins). If you were not shopping at supermarket bulk bins but buying packaged food, if you were buying any organic packaged food, it’s much cheaper to buy organic food from a bulk bin than in a packet from the supermarket, so you should notice cheaper bulk bins if you were buying any organic food packaged. In terms of buying pre-made items from a bulk bin instead of from a packet (i.e. buying breakfast cereals, pasta, snacks, chocolate – pre-made stuff – this can be more expensive buying from bulk bins. Personally, our approach is that buying pre-made items from a bulk bin is a treat/one-off occasion only, and generally we only buy wholefoods and we make stuff from scratch from wholefoods if we want it – i.e. we make our own muesli, pasta, snacks etc. – that’s the cheapest option – cheaper than buying premade from supermarket and or from a bulk bin)
Hopper Home Eco Shop is the most zero waste bulk bin store in Wellington, so we recommend shopping there from a waste reduction perspective. Their food is mostly organic and NZ-grown and it’s very affordable in light of that, and much cheaper than commonsense bulk bins. They also have a loyalty stamp card so you reduce your costs over time. Otherwise the bulk stores in Newtown are cheapest – Moshim’s is very affordable and they have had the best bulk bin range in Wellington for a very long time.
Moshims has closed down! And Silk Route Spices has been closed for a while.
Any ideas on where to get spices in Wellington South these days? All the other options listed here seem to do only packaged spices (Manga, Newtown Greengrocer).
The Newtown Greengrocer is expanding its bulk bin range but at the moment don’t have a very good system for pre-weighing containers.
Kia ora Hannah – thanks for your comment. We have been trying to get the low-down on Moshim’s (not there at the mo) as when Liam was there the sign outside the shop said it was for temporary maintenance (ie it didnt seem to be a permanent shut down)… Do you have more deets on this?
Thanks for the heads up on Silk Route Spices, will remove.
Re spices in Welly South, hmm the closest places we know of that do at least some spices unpackaged are The Newtown Greengrocer (as you mentioned) – though last time we went in their bulk range seemed to be contracting, rather than expanding and lots of the spices previously in bulk weren’t in bulk anymore. From memory (at least, the last time we shopped there, which was over 2 years ago, Manga will fill your containers out back with stuff that is prepacked if you ask nicely – or at least, they did for Liam back in the day…). Commonsense Kilbirnie is the only CS doing spices in bulk. We drove past in a bus (so couldn’t stop to look and hence haven’t added it into guide yet) an Asian Grocery store in Lyall Bay that looked like it had bulk bins, so might have spices in bulk. Otherwise, you might have to trek into town and go to Hopper Home Eco Shop.
Thank you so much for such a comprehensive list! It is incredible to have all of this information on one webpage rather than have 50 tabs open on my browser! I know you mentioned good places to get almond milk on tap, and was wondering if you knew any places that have soy milk! We use it a lot in cooking and also just prefer the taste 🙂
Thank you!
Kia ora Rebecca, thanks for your kind words. We don’t know anywhere that does soy milk on tap in Welly, sadly. Nor do we know anywhere that sells unpackaged soy beans so that you can make your own. If you aren’t into almond milk, have you considered making any other plant-based milks yourself? It’s not as hard as you might think (we were stunned when we tried for the first time…) We have a list of recipes for those that we make ourselves that you can find here: http://therubbishtrip.co.nz/recipes-and-inventions/drinks/
Thank you for compiling such a detailed list. A few updates: The fish boat at Harbourside market on Sunday is very happy to fill your own containers. There is now a metal straw / produce bag / bamboo toothbrush stall at this market too. New World and PaknSav are now all supposed to be accepting your own containers for deli products etc. Countdown in Newtown has live mussels (but I failed to convince them to use my container….) Milk in glass bottles available at NW Chaffers and Morre Wilsons (Aunt Jeans from Nelson.) Thanks again, I have book marked your page.
Thanks for these updates Sylvia, we will add them to the guide. A quick note that we don’t list Aunt Jeans except in the parts of the country where they take those milk bottles back for sterilisation and reuse (in our view, one-way glass bottles is too energy and resource intensive to justify for milk, even if recycled) – there are a couple of other options for glass bottle refillable milk in Wellington now 🙂
Hey – unfortunately you can’t get unpackaged coffee at New World Thorndon anymore 🙁 And we took a glass bottle (about 1L) to Moore Wilson’s in Porirua to get craft beer on tap but they would only sell us a plastic bottle that we could then refill. Didn’t see the point in that – it doesn’t taste as good for a start!
Hey Anna, thanks for that! Will update the New World coffee situation. Did the Moore Wilson’s people say why they would only do it in a plastic bottle? Was it a size issue (i.e. they will only take standard sizes 1.25L or 2L – we’ve had that issue before at other beer refill shops)?? Or was it that they only allowed you to use their own bottles, not any other kind? Or another reason??
It’s a bit silly, whatever the case – SO many places you can refill beer have no problem at all with any type of vessel.
Thank you so much for publishing this! I am new to getting serious about no waste and I have been spending ages trying to find everything, this will save me so much work. Champions.
22 Comments
This is such an awesome, thorough list for Wellington!! Thank you so much, I will be referring to it often :))
Yay! 😀
Hey, thanks for the awesome (and very comprehensive) list! Do you have any ideas about package free tofu? Thanks 🙂
Hiya Imogen – yes, apparently there’s a guy at the Dixon Street Sunday Market who has a store selling noodles and tofu. All pre-packed at the stall, but if you leave him with a clearly labelled container, he’ll take it back with him and put your order of tofu in and bring it to the next market (so you need to be organised a week in advance to drop your containers off with him).
The Hopper Home Eco Shop has unpackaged tofu. Just BYO container!
Thanks Sally! Exciting, aye?! This is in the guide already under the BYO Container-Friendly Deli section 🙂
Kia ora, any recommendations as to which bulk bin shops listed above are most affordable? We’re making the switch from the supermarket but don’t want our food bills to go up. Cheers!
Hiya – in terms of the extent of price difference you are likely to see, it depends on your shopping habits right now. If you are shopping in the bulk bins at supermarkets, you will find that the bulk bins anywhere else you go are generally cheaper than the supermarket bins (even Commonsense bulk bins are cheaper than most supermarket bulk bins). If you were not shopping at supermarket bulk bins but buying packaged food, if you were buying any organic packaged food, it’s much cheaper to buy organic food from a bulk bin than in a packet from the supermarket, so you should notice cheaper bulk bins if you were buying any organic food packaged. In terms of buying pre-made items from a bulk bin instead of from a packet (i.e. buying breakfast cereals, pasta, snacks, chocolate – pre-made stuff – this can be more expensive buying from bulk bins. Personally, our approach is that buying pre-made items from a bulk bin is a treat/one-off occasion only, and generally we only buy wholefoods and we make stuff from scratch from wholefoods if we want it – i.e. we make our own muesli, pasta, snacks etc. – that’s the cheapest option – cheaper than buying premade from supermarket and or from a bulk bin)
Hopper Home Eco Shop is the most zero waste bulk bin store in Wellington, so we recommend shopping there from a waste reduction perspective. Their food is mostly organic and NZ-grown and it’s very affordable in light of that, and much cheaper than commonsense bulk bins. They also have a loyalty stamp card so you reduce your costs over time. Otherwise the bulk stores in Newtown are cheapest – Moshim’s is very affordable and they have had the best bulk bin range in Wellington for a very long time.
Hope that helps!
Moshims has closed down! And Silk Route Spices has been closed for a while.
Any ideas on where to get spices in Wellington South these days? All the other options listed here seem to do only packaged spices (Manga, Newtown Greengrocer).
The Newtown Greengrocer is expanding its bulk bin range but at the moment don’t have a very good system for pre-weighing containers.
Kia ora Hannah – thanks for your comment. We have been trying to get the low-down on Moshim’s (not there at the mo) as when Liam was there the sign outside the shop said it was for temporary maintenance (ie it didnt seem to be a permanent shut down)… Do you have more deets on this?
Thanks for the heads up on Silk Route Spices, will remove.
Re spices in Welly South, hmm the closest places we know of that do at least some spices unpackaged are The Newtown Greengrocer (as you mentioned) – though last time we went in their bulk range seemed to be contracting, rather than expanding and lots of the spices previously in bulk weren’t in bulk anymore. From memory (at least, the last time we shopped there, which was over 2 years ago, Manga will fill your containers out back with stuff that is prepacked if you ask nicely – or at least, they did for Liam back in the day…). Commonsense Kilbirnie is the only CS doing spices in bulk. We drove past in a bus (so couldn’t stop to look and hence haven’t added it into guide yet) an Asian Grocery store in Lyall Bay that looked like it had bulk bins, so might have spices in bulk. Otherwise, you might have to trek into town and go to Hopper Home Eco Shop.
Hope that helps!
Hi!
Thank you so much for such a comprehensive list! It is incredible to have all of this information on one webpage rather than have 50 tabs open on my browser! I know you mentioned good places to get almond milk on tap, and was wondering if you knew any places that have soy milk! We use it a lot in cooking and also just prefer the taste 🙂
Thank you!
Kia ora Rebecca, thanks for your kind words. We don’t know anywhere that does soy milk on tap in Welly, sadly. Nor do we know anywhere that sells unpackaged soy beans so that you can make your own. If you aren’t into almond milk, have you considered making any other plant-based milks yourself? It’s not as hard as you might think (we were stunned when we tried for the first time…) We have a list of recipes for those that we make ourselves that you can find here: http://therubbishtrip.co.nz/recipes-and-inventions/drinks/
Thorndon New World has the wooden /fibre brushes for doing dishes and scrubbing vege.
Thank you!
Thank you for compiling such a detailed list. A few updates: The fish boat at Harbourside market on Sunday is very happy to fill your own containers. There is now a metal straw / produce bag / bamboo toothbrush stall at this market too. New World and PaknSav are now all supposed to be accepting your own containers for deli products etc. Countdown in Newtown has live mussels (but I failed to convince them to use my container….) Milk in glass bottles available at NW Chaffers and Morre Wilsons (Aunt Jeans from Nelson.) Thanks again, I have book marked your page.
Thanks for these updates Sylvia, we will add them to the guide. A quick note that we don’t list Aunt Jeans except in the parts of the country where they take those milk bottles back for sterilisation and reuse (in our view, one-way glass bottles is too energy and resource intensive to justify for milk, even if recycled) – there are a couple of other options for glass bottle refillable milk in Wellington now 🙂
Pete’s Emporium in the Hutt sells wood screws (and nails?) without packageing
Hey – unfortunately you can’t get unpackaged coffee at New World Thorndon anymore 🙁 And we took a glass bottle (about 1L) to Moore Wilson’s in Porirua to get craft beer on tap but they would only sell us a plastic bottle that we could then refill. Didn’t see the point in that – it doesn’t taste as good for a start!
Hey Anna, thanks for that! Will update the New World coffee situation. Did the Moore Wilson’s people say why they would only do it in a plastic bottle? Was it a size issue (i.e. they will only take standard sizes 1.25L or 2L – we’ve had that issue before at other beer refill shops)?? Or was it that they only allowed you to use their own bottles, not any other kind? Or another reason??
It’s a bit silly, whatever the case – SO many places you can refill beer have no problem at all with any type of vessel.
Sorry, only just saw this reply! No, it was a size issue I think – something to do with the funnel. We’ll try again with a smaller bottle.
Thank you so much for publishing this! I am new to getting serious about no waste and I have been spending ages trying to find everything, this will save me so much work. Champions.
Yay! Great to hear! Good luck with the serious no waste 😀