That's one of our sites. I'm very familiar with it. It's a facility that is about 400 hectares. Out of that we have already restored over 250 hectares of land. In my mind, it's a perfect laboratory of how the thinking has evolved on what quarry rehabilitation should be. In the past it was just put some dirt, put some grass, plant whatever is available, and we'll be happy.
We went to a second generation, which is very visible at the site, where we tried to mimic natural landforms a little bit more. Now we're in the third generation and we're working with several partners at trying to figure out what the landscape would have looked like if we had never been there. So we're trying to re-establish faces that look like the Niagara Escarpment. We're trying to have different types of shallow water.
Last Friday, as a matter of fact, we had a meeting with several NGOs to try to figure out the best way to go. In the past we planted trees. We removed trees so, naturally, we said we were going to replant trees. Now these guys are telling us that the environment that's really missing in our area is grassland. So right now we have to go back to government and tell them that these plans that we presented of planting trees may be more effective if we have a greater variety of environments.
So we're engaging a lot more with local communities and with NGOs so that our net long-term impact is a lot more beneficial than what was there before.