Valley Block and Concrete


Valley Block and Concrete
4492 E Fairview Loop
Wasilla, AK 99654
(907) 376-4784

Valley Block and Concrete has served Wasilla since 1990 with ready-mix concrete, concrete blocks, cultured stone, Insulated Concrete Forms (ICF’s), pavers and stepping stones, retaining wall & garden wall blocks, building materials and tools. [Note Valley Block and Concrete is not an industry serviced by the Alaska Railroad.]

For model railroaders: Even though there are no rail connection it would be easy to add one for incoming "special" aggregates.

Bill Hess photo

Satellite image of Valley Block and Concrete


WASILLA, ALASKA: WHERE THAT LONESOME WHISTLE BLOWS

Somewhere around 7:30 PM on the evening of July 28, I returned home from an unsuccessful Denali Star shoot just beyond the overpass on the way to Three Bears at Pittman. I had got a picture all right and technically it was fine, but it wasn’t what I wanted and so I came home, determined to try another evening.

After I parked in the driveway and grabbed Sancho’s bag, I realized I had left my launch pad behind. True, it is only a pizza box and is easily replaced, but I don’t want to leave pizza boxes to litter up the Alaska countryside, so I headed back to retrieve it. As I drove over the overpass, I was startled to see a train I knew nothing about passing under -a gravel train - and it pulled a caboose! I thought only the work train pulled a caboose. I continued on, retrieved my launch pad and got back on the highway, southbound. I hoped to catch up to the unknown gravel train but it beat me through the main part of Wasilla. Beyond there, the tracks wind through the valley below Was-Mart.

I figured if I stayed on the highway I could beat it to Valley Block and Concrete - just the right place to photograph it. I did beat it - just barely. I heard the whistle and rumble bearing down even as I extended Sancho’s prop arms in preparation to launch. It rolled into the scene just as I launched Sancho.

The lead locomotive was the legendary ARR 3001, a GP40-2 engine still wearing the original black paint it was delivered in.

So here it is, this gravel train I did not know about, passing by the Valley Block and Concrete gravel mine. I shot frames one and two and then had Sancho give pursuit in the hope he might swoop in for a closer view of the caboose but the train rolled faster than Sancho’s top speed of somewhere between 40 and 45. Plus I knew wires crossed the tracks a short distance ahead. They are hard to see and invisible to Sancho’s collision avoidance system. I shot photo 3 and gave up the chase.

Added by Frank Keller - Bill, this is indeed the Work Train. Part of their duties involve dumping ballast which is what you see in the cars.

Valey Block and Concrete
 

Valey Block and Concrete

Valey Block and Concrete

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Page created 8/28/20 and last updated 11/6/22