Tanana
River bridge gets 21-shovel salute - 9/29/11
Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Jeff Richardson |
SALCHA - Twenty-one ceremonial shovels were wielded at the groundbreaking for the Tanana River Bridge, which said something about both the profile of the project and the anticipation behind Wednesday's event. |
Transportation
Secretary Ray LaHood tours the Alaska Railroad - 9/27/11
by John Combs |
On September 27 Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood rode
the rails of a special charter from Anchorage, Girdwood, Spencer Glacier
and back to see first hand some of the finest transportation Alaska has
to offer. This trip rode on the heels of his announcement of nearly $20
million for line relocation projects across the U.S. which included $1,141,840
for ARR Milepost 142 curve alignment adjacent to Eklutna. This effort will
increase track speeds, reduce road noise and improve safety and efficiency.
Check out senator Mark Begich's Flickr
photos of the event. . |
Fairbanks
coal bunkers the last of their kind - 9/12/11
Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Ray Bonnell |
FAIRBANKS - Fairbanks was never a coal-mining town, but coal did help Fairbanks recover from the lean times of the late 1910s and early 1920s. In 1910, about 11,000 people lived in the Fairbanks area (the city had 3,541 residents) but after the drift mines were played out, most miners moved on. By 1920, the city had shrunk to about 1,100 residents and most mining camps were virtually deserted. |
Into
The Wild: Alaskan Train Caters To The Intrepid - 9/20/11
NPR by ANNIE FEIDT |
There aren't many rules on the train called the Hurricane Turn. Dogs roam the aisles and sit next to their owners on the seats. The baggage car doors are wide open, even when the train is moving. |
Russia
Renews Proposal for Siberia-Alaska Rail Tunnel - 9/15/11
KTUU.com By Chris Klint |
The Daily Mail of London reports that Russian officials are resurrecting an idea championed by the late Gov. Wally Hickel: linking Asia and North America with a 65-mile-long undersea rail tunnel across the Bering Strait at a cost of nearly $100 billion. The tunnel, linking Uelen on the Russian side with Nome on the Alaskan side, would surface twice on Big Diomede and Little Diomede islands. The 15-year project was proposed by the Kremlin this week at a three-day economic conference in Yakutsk on utilizing the resources of the Russian Far East. |
Mat-Su
Residents Speak About Proposed Wishbone Hill Project - 9/15/11
Channel 2 News, www.ktuu.com by Jason Lamb |
At Tuesday night's meeting of the Mat-Su Borough Assembly, members came face-to-face with dozens of people and their opinions about the proposed Wishbone Hill coal mine outside of Sutton. |
Speeders — little
railroad maintenance cars —
are getting put to a new use thanks to a unique tour group - 9/15/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Matt Buxton |
FAIRBANKS — Fairbanks has seen plenty of tourists this season, but nothing quite like the small group of hobbyists who set out to view Alaska from the seat of old-fashioned railroad speeders — compact car-sized maintenance vehicles that were used during the past century. |
New
hopper status - 9/14/11
by Robert Krol |
New (used) hoppers came through Whittier today, no camera,
pouring rain. . |
Work
on Tanana Bridge scheduled to start soon - 9/1/11
Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Staff Report |
FAIRBANKS — As construction crews start work on the Tanana rail bridge crossing, drivers on the Richardson Highway could start to see delays. Lane closures, closed shoulders and reduced speeds will be part of construction that’s scheduled to start near Salcha within the next few days and run through November as crews embark on three years of construction. |
Freight
car purchase - 8/26/11 Submitted by an anonymous source |
The Alaska Railroad recently purchased both hopper and flat cars: - 70 used hopper cars, builder Johnstown, year built 1999/2000, aluminum, quad hopper bottom discharge, rotary, 3770 cubic foot capacity, all due in Alaska by early October - 40 used multi configuration COFC Flat cars, builder Greenbrier, year built 2000, all due in Alaska by mid November [Webmaster's note: It sure would be nice to see some photos of these
to use for upcoming Pictures of the Week!] |
Open
house planned for Tanana River bridge project - 8/16/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Staff Report |
FAIRBANKS — The Alaska Railroad will host an open house later this month to field questions about the upcoming Tanana River bridge project. The 3,300-foot bridge, part of a $190 million first phase of a project that will eventually expand railroad operations to Delta Junction, will include a new span across the river and a related levee near Salcha. The project is expected to last three years, with groundbreaking planned next month. |
Massive
amounts of rock needed for new Tanana River bridge - 8/10/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Christopher Eshleman |
FAIRBANKS — Crews will need 450,000 tons of stone to support a newbridge across the Tanana River, according to the Alaska Railroad Corp. The railroad, which is leading the bridge project, secured a lead contractor late last month and has work crews preparing the riverbanks near Salcha for construction, the corporation said this week. |
Work
crews prepare new Tanana River bridge site - 8/10/11 Anchorage Daily News The Associated Press |
FAIRBANKS, Alaska - Plans to build a new bridge across the Tanana River are moving forward with the Alaska Railroad Corp. securing a lead contractor for the project. The railroad has signed a $156.4 million deal with Nebraska-based Kiewit Corp. to be the lead contractor for the project, expected to cost about $190 million and the railroad. |
Officials
float idea to extend Pioneer Park train to visitors center - 8/5/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Matt Buxton |
FAIRBANKS — Ever think of working an antique small-track train into your morning commute? Transportation officials are talking about extending the Pioneer Park train track — yes, the one that meanders around the Alaska history-oriented park — to downtown. The track could follow a roughly two-mile stretch of the Chena River to the Morris Thompson Cultural and Visitors Center. |
Sea,
rail links both vital - 8/2/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner |
Editorial: 50 years ago It is heartening to see that four major U.S. railroads and the Port of Seattle have announced plans for an improvement in shipping service to Alaska. According to the recent announcement, the railroads and a Canadian barge line will start a seatrain service to Alaska in the immediate future. The participants say they can start such a service in six to eight months time with a $4 million investment and bring loaded railroad cars to railbelt points. |
Canadian
firm talks of building railroad from Alberta to Alaska - 7/1/11 Fairbanks Daily News Miner by Dermot Cole |
FAIRBANKS — I’m not sure how this would pencil out, but there’s a new plan to build a 1,250-mile railroad from Alberta to Alaska to send oil made from oil sands to Valdez, according to a Canadian company called G Seven Generations. The $12 billion project, under which the railroad would supply oil to the trans-Alaska pipeline near Delta, has yet to move beyond the press release stage, so take this with a grain of skepticism. |
Page created 2/1/11 and last updated 10/1/11