Based in St. Laurent, Que., Stella - Jones
makes railway ties and utility poles, 82 % of them southward - bound, says 5i Research's Ryan Modesto.
Not exact matches
In the 1840s, his work had helped to launch the timber «pickling» industry, in which
railway ties and telegraph poles were protected from decay by dipping them in creosote,
made from coal tar.
Other Australian outdoor centres with a similar environmental ethos, had previously constructed their bunkrooms from discarded city buses or
made log cabins from 3,000 salvaged
railway sleepers (
ties), so in some ways a train was the inevitable next step.
The Arco lamp spotlights the side tables
made from reclaimed
railway ties.