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Construction Debris Chutes for Sale
Move construction and demolition debris from elevated work areas to a dumpster or collection point with a chute system planned for your jobsite.
HodChutes offers 21″, 26″, and 33″ HDPE construction debris chutes, along with intake hoppers, anchors, manual and electric winches, and the components needed to build a complete system.
Choosing the right construction chute requires more than measuring the building height. The debris type and volume, chute height, distance to the dumpster, number of intake hoppers, and available anchoring location all affect the final setup.
HodChutes delivers across the United States within five days and provides a detailed installation guide, installation videos, and 24/7 virtual support.
Need help choosing the right debris chute system? Request a quote for your project.
How to Choose the Right Construction Chute System
A construction chute should be planned as a complete system, not simply as a stack of chute sections.
Before ordering, consider these six factors:
Debris Type and Size
Start with the material that will move through the chute. Smaller debris has different requirements from larger pieces of demolition material. The size and type of debris help determine which chute diameter to consider.
Debris Volume
Consider how much material the project will generate. A lower-volume project has different needs from a job where debris is continuously loaded into the chute.
Chute Height
The total drop height affects the number of chute sections and the complete system configuration. As the system gets taller, the support and anchoring plan becomes increasingly important.
Distance to the Dumpster
Do not calculate chute length from building height alone. The dumpster may be directly below the chute or farther from the building.
The distance and path to the dumpster can affect the total chute length, final position, and overall system layout.
Number of Intake Hoppers
Some projects need one loading point. Others need workers to load debris from multiple floors.
The number and location of intake hoppers should be planned before ordering the system.
Available Anchoring Location
The building and jobsite determine how the chute can be supported.
HodChutes offers roof and parapet, window, balcony, floor, and scaffold anchor options.
The anchor setup should be considered together with the chute height, diameter, intake points, and path to the dumpster.
Which Debris Chute Size Do You Need?
HodChutes offers 21″, 26″, and 33″ HDPE construction chutes.
21″ Construction Debris Chutes
Consider a 21″ chute when the debris is smaller and the expected debris volume is lower.
26″ Construction Debris Chutes
Consider a 26″ chute as debris size, debris volume, system height, or the number of intake points increases.
33″ Construction Debris Chutes
Consider a 33″ chute when the project involves the largest debris or highest debris volume and a larger opening is important to the system.
The diameter should not be chosen from one factor alone. Use this order:
Debris size → debris volume → chute height → dumpster distance → intake hoppers → anchoring location
Not sure which size you need? Send us your project details and we can help you plan the system.
Build a Complete Debris Chute System
A complete debris chute system may require more than chute sections.
Depending on the project, your system can include:
- 21″, 26″, or 33″ HDPE chute sections
- Intake hoppers for one or multiple loading points
- Roof/parapet, window, balcony, floor, or scaffold anchors
- Manual or electric winches
- Additional components and accessories required for the system layout
Before ordering, plan the complete path from the loading point to the dumpster:
Where will debris enter? → How far will it travel? → Where will the chute be supported? → Where will the debris exit?
HodChutes also provides a detailed installation guide, step-by-step construction chute installation videos, and 24/7 virtual support.
Debris Chutes for Construction, Demolition, Roofing, and Renovation
Construction chutes can be used for:
- demolition;
- renovation;
- roofing;
- new construction;
- multi-story and high-rise projects;
- and jobs with one or multiple debris-loading points.
The right setup depends on the actual jobsite. A roofing project can have different debris and support needs from a multi-floor demolition project, and a project with a dumpster directly below the chute can require a different layout from one where the dumpster is farther from the building.
Construction Debris Chute Safety and OSHA Requirements
OSHA requires an enclosed chute when materials are dropped more than 20 feet to a point outside a building’s exterior walls. Demolition work can have additional requirements involving chute openings, protected drop areas, and discharge areas.
The requirements that apply to a specific project depend on the type of work, the jobsite, and how the chute is installed and used. Contractors should follow applicable federal, state, local, and jobsite safety requirements.
Always follow the installation guide and the safety requirements that apply to your specific project.
For official federal requirements, review OSHA Standard 1926.252 — Disposal of Waste Materials.
Construction Debris Chute Prices and International Sales
The cost of a construction debris chute system depends on the chute diameter, total length, intake hoppers, anchor setup, winch requirements, and other components.
For detailed pricing and system examples, visit the Construction Debris Chute Price List.
HodChutes also sells and ships chute systems internationally. For export information, visit International Construction Debris Chute Sales.
Get a Quote for a Construction Debris Chute System
To help plan your system, provide:
- project location;
- building or chute height;
- debris type and size;
- expected debris volume;
- distance to the dumpster;
- number of intake hoppers;
- available anchoring location;
- and manual or electric winch needs.
Request a quote for your construction debris chute system.