Every day for 20 years, engineer John Kellett walked across a bridge on his way to work near the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland, and saw trash littering the river below. The garbage bugged him, but he didn’t know what to do. Then inspiration struck. Kellett came up with an idea for a machine that spins in the river’s current, scooping up trash as it flows toward the ocean. Kellett turned his idea into reality, and in 2014 he installed the device, nicknamed Mr. Trash Wheel. Since then, it’s pulled nearly 680,000 kilograms (1.5 million pounds) of trash from Baltimore’s harbor.
Every day for 20 years, engineer John Kellett walked across a bridge. He was on his way to work near the Inner Harbor of Baltimore, Maryland. And every day, he saw trash littering the river below. The garbage bugged him, but he didn’t know what to do. Then he had an idea. Kellett thought up a machine that spins in the river’s current. It scoops up trash that’s flowing toward the ocean. Kellett turned his idea into reality. In 2014 he set up the device, nicknamed Mr. Trash Wheel. Since then, it’s pulled nearly 680,000 kilograms (1.5 million pounds) of trash from the harbor.