The opening, planned for June 13, will include a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the rail-to-truck transfer site, which is located at LIRC’s rail yard, 100 Homestead Avenue, in Jeffersonville. Several officials of both companies as well as local dignitaries are scheduled to participate, including Jeffersonville Mayor Mike Moore.
The new facility is the result of several months of planning by Louisville & Indiana Railroad and Great Western Malting Co. — a leading American malt producer based in Vancouver, Wash., with plants in Vancouver and Pocatello, Idaho.
“This is a big extension of what we’re already doing elsewhere,” says Great Western President Mike O’Toole. “The new transload will allow us to offer cost-effective, high quality service to customers around Louisville and northern Kentucky. This facility will definitely set the bar for delivery of this product.”
Great Western was already looking to invest in the Louisville market when it began talks with LIRC in June 2018. The railroad delivered the first shipment of malting grain in mid-July 2018 and began a second round of shipments in November.
“Our due diligence led us to LIRC,” says O’Toole, “and once we saw their facilities, their yards, and met with their people, we liked what they have to offer.”
Groundbreaking for the facility was mid-February.
For Louisville & Indiana, the new transload is a major project with a new customer and, in the case of malting grain, a new commodity.
Scott Lurkins, senior director of business development at Anacostia Rail Holdings, owner of LIRC, says, “We’re excited to partner with Great Western Malting to expand the capabilities of our Jeffersonville terminal and we look forward to strong growth opportunities for supplying malt and related products to this region’s distilling and brewing industry.” Lurkins adds, “We worked collaboratively from start to finish with several partners to create a transportation solution that not only met Great Western’s needs, but also exceeded the expectations of the customers they serve.”
Great Western is building the facility under a long-term lease of space from LIRC. Other partners in the project include Arrow Material Services, a terminal operations management firm based in Sewickley, Pa.; First Class Services, a specialty trucking company from Lewisport, Ky.; and Castlen Steel, a fabricator based in Owensboro, Ky.
Built to the highest standards for handling food products, the transload facility features a covered, open-ended structure enclosing a 90-foot section of track with a concrete pad. A concrete pit below allows conveyors to load trucks for delivery of malting grain to customers. “The transload will be able to unload 80-tons of grain from covered hopper cars in as little as 30 minutes,” explains Lurkins. The entire complex will be able to accommodate up to 33 railcars.
— An Anacostia Rail Holdings news release. June 11, 2019
That’s a lot of beer!
A 33 rail car spot is a big industry.
33 rail cars isn’t big enough for the class one’s to notice. Good job marketing by LIRC.
Nice to these big projects by pass the class ones and locate on the smaller roads!