As roughly one million Seahawks fans gathered along 4th Avenue to celebrate a Super Bowl win, the party left downtown Seattle quite messy, with thousands of pounds of garbage being left behind.
Seattle Public Utilities and the Washington State Department of Transportation estimated that more than 10,000 pounds of trash and five large pieces of furniture were collected after the parade, according to KIRO 7.
But even with hundreds of thousands of fans celebrating downtown, the parade remained crime-free aside from the littering, with no arrests being made during the event.
The cleanup efforts along 4th Avenue were much more hands-on than the standard garbage cleanup, though the trash collected after the parade paled in comparison to the daily amount of garbage thrown out across Seattle.
Each Seattle resident generates approximately 2.68 pounds of garbage each day, according to the city’s metrics for trash collection. While Seattle’s population currently exceeds 800,000, the city could process more than two million pounds of trash per day.
Lessons learned ahead of the FIFA World Cup
As Seattle anticipates a massive presence of soccer fans attending the FIFA World Cup at Lumen Field, city planners will use the Super Bowl parade as a playbook for how to handle a similar trash cleanup.
Despite the massive amounts of trash collected from the single-day Seahawks parade, the city has a tough test ahead with several games scheduled for the highly anticipated FIFA World Cup’s inaugural appearance in Seattle.
Lumen Field will host six FIFA World Cup matches throughout June and into early July. Four of the games in Seattle will be group stage games, with the U.S. men’s national team playing on June 19. The latter two games in July will be elimination games in the round of 32 and the round of 16.
While FIFA World Cup tickets have been in extremely high demand, the city can expect a completely sold-out crowd of nearly 69,000 fans for each of the six games at Lumen Field.
Even though six sold-out FIFA World Cup games add up to roughly 414,000 fans, the amount of garbage produced will likely rank near Seahawks parade levels, with thousands of pounds of trash being produced throughout the event.
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