Frontline Washing Systems

Frontline Washing Systems Modular washing solutions that turn soil and slurry into value for your bottom line.

05/21/2026

What does “modular” actually mean?

For an aggregate recovery system, it means the equipment is designed in sections that are easier to transport, install, and expand over time.

Tyrone International designs its systems to make setup more straightforward. Many parts are pre-wired and pre-plumbed before delivery, which helps reduce the amount of work needed on site.

For operators, that means a faster path from delivery to production, with a system that can grow as the business grows.

05/20/2026

Canada is not an easy place to bring in new processing technology.

Variable feed materials. Harsh conditions. Rising disposal costs. Tighter regulations.

That is why choosing the right manufacturer was never going to be a quick decision.

Over three years, we visited sites across Europe, compared different systems in action, and looked for a manufacturer that was pushing aggregate recovery forward while still understanding real-world operating conditions.

Tyrone stood out for two key reasons:

• Deep specialization in soil and slurry processing
• Modular, operator-friendly systems designed to scale with the business

Together, Frontline Washing Systems and Tyrone bring proven washing technology to Canada, backed by local support that stays involved long after installation.

05/20/2026

Dry processing has been used for decades to sort soil, aggregate, and waste materials.

For many applications, crushing and screening can do the job. But with contaminated or highly variable soils, dry processing has limits.

Oversized debris can often be removed mechanically, but clay, silt, organics, plastics, and fine particles are harder to separate through dry screening alone. These fractions can hold contamination, bind to valuable aggregate, and make the material difficult to reuse.

That is where wet processing changes the outcome.

Soil washing uses water, screening, scrubbing, classification, and fines management to separate usable sand, stone, and aggregate from the material that needs further handling or disposal.

For the right feed material, that means less volume going to landfill and more recovered aggregate going back to work.

05/15/2026

Transfer stations are a critical part of urban material management.

They help keep projects moving by receiving excess soils, slurry, and other disposed materials, then consolidating and hauling that material to approved landfills or disposal sites farther from the city.

But every tonne that leaves the gate carries a cost.

With aggregate recovery, transfer stations can change the economics of disposal. Instead of trucking out the full volume, soil washing can separate recoverable sand, stone, and aggregate from incoming material, reducing the amount that needs to go to landfill.

For the right material stream, that means lower disposal exposure, less outbound hauling, and a new opportunity to turn recovered aggregate into usable product.

05/13/2026

Approved landfills are working with a fixed resource: permitted airspace.

Every cell has a limit. Once that space is filled, its value is gone, and the site moves one step closer to its approved capacity.

That’s where aggregate recovery changes the equation.

By washing incoming soils and separating out reusable sand, stone, and aggregate, operators can reduce the volume going to disposal and preserve valuable landfill capacity for material that truly needs it.

In the right application, soil washing can recover a significant portion of incoming material as usable aggregate, helping extend landfill life, reduce disposal pressure, and create more value from every load.

That’s the power of aggregate recovery.

05/12/2026

Four types of businesses should be taking a serious look at soil washing:

Transfer stations, approved fill sites, civil contractors, and hydrovac operations.

These operators are under pressure from rising trucking costs, higher tipping fees, limited disposal capacity, tighter material documentation, and growing demand to recover value from material that used to be treated as waste.

For the right operation, aggregate recovery systems can help reduce disposal reliance, recover usable sand and aggregate, and turn excess soil or slurry into a more controlled, profitable process.

Because every tonne of soil should create value, not just cost.

05/07/2026

Aggregate recovery isn’t for everyone.

But for the right people, this technology could completely flip entire business models.

If you’re exploring whether soil washing makes sense for your site, start with three questions:

Where are you located?
• Your location helps determine the type of material you’re likely handling, the quality of sand and aggregate that may be recoverable, and whether there is a local market for those products.

What is your total annual volume?
• Your volume gives us a starting point for estimating how much material could be processed and how much reusable sand, stone, or aggregate could be recovered.

What are your local tipping and trucking costs?
• In many cases, the closer you are to urban centres, the stronger the business case for aggregate recovery becomes.

If the numbers line up, aggregate recovery can help turn a disposal problem into a controlled process, and in the right market, a new source of revenue.

05/07/2026

What aggregates can you recover using the latest soil washing technology?

Well, It depends on the makeup of the feed material, which can vary from site to site.

As an example, let’s look at contaminated soil from this site, located about two hours outside of Vancouver, BC. This material can be processed into five distinct recovered products:

• 0-2 mm fine sand
• 2-5 mm coarse sand
• 5-10 mm rock
• 1" rock
• 1-2.5" rock

Every aggregate recovery operation is different. We work alongside you to identify the right system configuration for your material, site requirements, and investment goals.

05/05/2026

For years, the industry has called it soil washing.

The term is accurate, but for people new to the concept, it can sound like a cleanup process focused on dirt, waste, or contamination.

Aggregate recovery gives the process a clearer, more practical meaning.

It puts the focus on usable sand, stone, and aggregate that can be separated and put back to work. Material that might otherwise be hauled away, tipped, and replaced at added cost.

With the right system, operators can recover value, reduce disposal pressure, and find opportunity in material once written off as waste.

This is Aggregate Recovery.

Excess soils, solved.Every civil job leaves you with soil you can’t just put back.The real challenge isn’t just how much...
04/30/2026

Excess soils, solved.

Every civil job leaves you with soil you can’t just put back.

The real challenge isn’t just how much soil you move. It’s how different every load is.

From clean granular material to clay, organics, debris, and mixed soils, every load can require a different approach.

Soil washing helps operators recover usable sand and aggregate, reduce disposal pressure, and take better control of material leaving the site.

Learn more:https://frontlinewashing.com/excess-soils/

Washing technology works. It’s proven, and it’s ready for Canada.Operators overseas are already using soil and slurry wa...
04/29/2026

Washing technology works. It’s proven, and it’s ready for Canada.

Operators overseas are already using soil and slurry washing to cut disposal costs, recover material, and take control of their operations.

We built Frontline Washing Systems to bring that capability to Canada, with local support, real application know-how, and hands-on service from day one.

See how washing systems are already delivering results on real jobsites.

Check out our case studies to learn more: https://frontlinewashing.com/case-studies/

Address

43779 Progress Way
Chilliwack, BC
V2R0E6

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