Naperville
(Satellite) Google Maps seems to be broken this week. It is not offering a 3D view nor street views from Ogden. The photos on the map site imply that this plant makes Oreos. But I don't believe that is true because they were made in the Chicago plant described below. I have read a comment that indicated this plant makes Post cereals. I have also read that the Millennials don't eat near as much cold cereals as the Baby Boomers did. (Update: per an Anonymous comment below, this plant has been making Triscuts for over a decade. It is good to know that when Niagara Falls lost the production of Triscuits, the jobs stayed in American instead of going to Mexico.)
The plant is well landscaped in front so trees hide an overall view of the front of the plant. But the main building is tall enough that you can see above the Land Rover dealer that it still has its Nabisco signs even though it is now owned by Mondelez. You can barely see the second sign on the stairway enclosure on the right.
trips/buildings/nabisco/Naperville 3556 taken 20160716 |
Satellite |
I've seen a reference to delivering wheat, not flour, to the plant. So I digitally zoomed in on the hopper car. It has three bays instead of five, so it is a delivering wheat instead of flour. That means the plant does its own milling. That would explain why it has so many storage silos compared to Pepperidge Farm that receives flour and normally pneumatically transfers the flour from a car directly to its baking machinery.
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Satellite |
20181025 6526 |
Since I'm a railfan, not a shiny-sheet-metal-in-front-of-a-train fan, here is the entire photo where we can see a stack of jointed rail on the left side and a couple of ribbons on the right.
Those ribbons look like they are about 150' long, which means they probably came from a crossing replacement. Below, on the left side of the photo, are the rails they pulled off M1 on Nov 8, 2018 from the Main Street crossing in Downers Grove, IL. The flexibility of even heavyweight rail continues to amaze me. (I'm sure that BNSF installs only their best rail on the Racetrack because commuters and Amtrak run 70mph through here and a lot of heavy freight runs at 40mph.)
20180909 5119 |
Since the receiving leads cross the driveway to the shipping docks, David caught an up close view of #2380. Of particular note is the Remote Control Equipment sign under the number. I did not know that BNSF (actually, their unions) allows remote control. It is quite common within companies that have their own locomotive such as the steel mills in Northwest Indiana. The H1 livery means that it is an older model. The Diesel Shop indicates #2380 is a GP38-2 built in 1978. Local freights are the railroading equivalent of putting a horse out to pasture because they spend most of their time idling or going slow and because they don't stray too far away from repair shops. I've even seen photos of Sante Fe and BN liveries in local trains.
David Miller |
Chicago Plant
(Nabisco Satellite; Mondelez Satellite)
If you look through the photos on the satellite pages, you will see shipping containers parked at the loading bays (e.g. Hug Group). So this plant probably ships some product over 500 miles away. I wonder if it supplies the entire country. But it looks like they still receive corn syrup (grey tank cars) and flour (white hoppers) in bulk by rail. (I don't know what would be in the black tank car and the red, 3-bay hopper car.)
Nick Hart posted
The South Chicago Job has finished its air test and is on the move at Kedzie Avenue in Chicago, a little east of Hayford Junction. With a big train, a pair of hard working SD40-3's was just what the doctor ordered. In the background, the Nabisco Bakery Job can be seen preparing to tie onto its pick-up with a GP23-ECO in charge. Once tied on, the Bakery Job would make the short trip back home to Clearing Yard.
February 2nd, 2016
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Yoshi Shima |
Ken Schmidt posted Taking lunch at the "cookie", BRC 526's crew will finish their work at Nabisco in December 1988. Nabisco is on the SW side, east of BRC's Clearing yard. |
Looks like you are correct on the Chicago plant having its own switcher. Going back a few years on Google Earth timeline, a railcar mover is visible switching inside the plant.
ReplyDeletenaperville plant makes triscuits used to make shredded wheat and coco pebbles for post only triscut for over a decade
ReplyDeleteThanks for the update. I have updated these notes and the notes on the Nabisco plant in Niagara Falls, NY.
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