RISE Design Studio Blog: Modern Architecture & Design Insights

Designing for Less Waste, Not More Tax: What the Landfill Reform Means for Architecture That Matters

Written by Sean Hill | May 7, 2025

At RISE Design Studio, we don’t just design buildings - we shape legacies. Every structure we create carries a question: What kind of future are we building toward? That question sits at the heart of our practice, and it’s why the UK government’s consultation on reforming Landfill Tax in England and Northern Ireland caught our attention.

This modern timber-frame structure by RISE Design Studio exemplifies low-impact construction and sustainable design thinking, using natural materials to reduce embodied carbon while creating warm, future-ready spaces.

This isn’t just a policy update. It’s a mirror being held up to an industry that, too often, treats waste as an afterthought. For us, this is a chance to double down on something we’ve believed from the start: waste is a design decision.

The End of the Line Starts on the Drawing Board

The proposed shift to a single Landfill Tax rate by 2030 simplifies the current two-tier system. No more special rates for materials that somehow find their way into grey areas. No more ambiguity. This is about transparency. Accountability. Clarity.

In our studio, clarity is not a burden - it’s a design principle. When we model a building, we’re not only thinking about light, form, and space. We’re thinking about legacy. What enters a site should be considered for its full life cycle, from raw material to end-of-use. Where will it go when it’s no longer needed? If that answer is a skip, then we ask: can we do better?

On our retrofitted family homes and cultural buildings, we’ve reused bricks from demolished extensions, salvaged timber floors, and celebrated the patina of second-life materials. It’s not just resourceful - it’s richer, more human. Every reclaimed element has a story, a previous life that deepens the new one it’s entering.

Reform Is Design Fuel

There’s power in limitations. When the government proposes to remove the Qualifying Fines Regime by 2027, they’re removing a system that has, for too long, enabled the misclassification of waste and quietly encouraged complacency. That’s not something we fear - it’s something we welcome.

Design thrives under constraint. That’s often where the most compelling work is born. Without fallback options that allow low-value materials to slip through the net, we are challenged to innovate. To ask better questions at the start of a project. To specify with a purpose. To design not just for now, but for what’s next.

The Cost of Doing the Wrong Thing

Raising the tax on illegal dumping to 200% of the standard rate by 2027 isn’t just a deterrent - it’s a moral statement. It says: we care about what happens to our environment, even when no one’s watching.

Fly-tipping doesn’t just degrade landscapes—it degrades trust. It erodes the integrity of construction and architectural practice. At RISE, we work with makers, joiners, and builders who understand that how you build matters just as much as what you build. Every skip filled thoughtlessly is a missed opportunity. Every site treated carelessly is a wound we all carry.

This kind of enforcement - yes, even through tax - sets a precedent. One that we believe will help elevate the profession, support more ethical building practices, and foster a culture of respect for both materials and places.

Circular Thinking Is the Architect’s Superpower

At its core, this tax reform is nudging us all toward a circular economy—a system where resources are valued, cycled, and stewarded, rather than used once and discarded. And in that vision, architecture has an outsized role to play.

The construction industry is responsible for over 60% of total UK waste. That statistic isn’t just sobering - it’s galvanising. It means we have power. Influence. And, we would argue, responsibility.

We’ve seen firsthand how smart design can reverse that trend. Take our work with a Victorian terrace in London: instead of demolishing walls, we reimagined the space with interventions that respected the existing structure. Instead of replacing materials, we cleaned, treated, and reused them. The result? A home that is low-energy, low-waste, and deeply characterful.

This kind of design thinking doesn’t just save carbon - it builds identity. It ties us to place, to history, to something bigger than ourselves.

Looking Ahead, Building Better

These reforms aren’t the full solution. They won’t magically clean up every building site, nor will they undo decades of wasteful practices overnight. But they are a step in the right direction.

And sometimes, a small step is all you need to shift momentum.

At RISE, we’ve built our practice on the belief that meaningful architecture isn’t about the grand gesture - it’s about the accumulation of thoughtful decisions. It’s about asking: What if this didn’t go to landfill? and then acting on it. It’s about showing that beauty and sustainability aren’t trade-offs, but natural allies.

We believe the future of architecture is regenerative. Purposeful. Waste-conscious by default. And we believe this consultation is one more invitation to get there faster.

If you’re building a project that you want to outlive trends, outlast landfill, and inspire others, let’s talk. Because every design choice is a chance to do things differently. And we’re here for those who want to build like they mean it.