From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Okanagan Valley Railway
120x100
Okanagan Valley Railway GP10 rolls past grade crossing near Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. (Locomotive was transferred to OmniTRAX subsidiary CTRW after shutdown of OKAN).
Overview
Headquarters Vernon, British Columbia
Reporting markOKAN
Locale Okanagan Valley
Dates of operation1998–2009
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

Okanagan Valley Railway ( reporting mark OKAN) was a railroad operating former Canadian Pacific Railway track in the Okanagan region of British Columbia, Canada. Service commenced on November 22, 1998. OKAN's line ran from a CP connection at Sicamous to Vernon (46.3 miles). It also had trackage rights on Kelowna Pacific Railway's line (operating former CN track) from Vernon to Kelowna (33.4 miles) and from Lumby Junction to Lumby (14.4 miles). The railroad was owned by OmniTRAX.

Among the businesses served were forestry, farming, chemicals and cement. Okanagan Valley Railway's biggest customer was Owens-Illinois, Western Canada's only producer of glass beverage containers.

When the O-I glass plant closed in Spring 2009, OKAN lost most of its business and ultimately shut down on September 21, 2009. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Shortlines Come to the Okanagan".
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Okanagan Valley Railway
120x100
Okanagan Valley Railway GP10 rolls past grade crossing near Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. (Locomotive was transferred to OmniTRAX subsidiary CTRW after shutdown of OKAN).
Overview
Headquarters Vernon, British Columbia
Reporting markOKAN
Locale Okanagan Valley
Dates of operation1998–2009
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

Okanagan Valley Railway ( reporting mark OKAN) was a railroad operating former Canadian Pacific Railway track in the Okanagan region of British Columbia, Canada. Service commenced on November 22, 1998. OKAN's line ran from a CP connection at Sicamous to Vernon (46.3 miles). It also had trackage rights on Kelowna Pacific Railway's line (operating former CN track) from Vernon to Kelowna (33.4 miles) and from Lumby Junction to Lumby (14.4 miles). The railroad was owned by OmniTRAX.

Among the businesses served were forestry, farming, chemicals and cement. Okanagan Valley Railway's biggest customer was Owens-Illinois, Western Canada's only producer of glass beverage containers.

When the O-I glass plant closed in Spring 2009, OKAN lost most of its business and ultimately shut down on September 21, 2009. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Shortlines Come to the Okanagan".

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