Viscose Radford Plant-Viscoe Road, Bridge
NW Mailing List
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Wed Feb 7 21:22:59 EST 2007
Bruce, thank you for adding to this subject. Others now are getting the rest
of the story.
Bud Jeffries
----- Original Message -----
From: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 07, 2007 4:21 PM
Subject: Re: Viscose Radford Plant-Viscoe Road, Bridge
> At 10:12 PM -0500 1/25/07, Bud Jeffries wrote:
>>Farmer Jeffries can not add much. Viscoe Road is the name for the access
>>road to the site now from Rte 114. The American Viscose was to build a
>>factory there after WWII and the N&W built the bridge across the New River
>>to give rail access to the proposed site. There is no reference of the
>>bridge's construction in the N&W annual reports, but a source of mine says
>>the bridge has a date of 1951 on a builders plate. I thought it was a
>>little
>>earlier than that. The factory was never built by American Viscose because
>>of decreasing demand for its products. For the same reason, its Roanoke
>>plant closed in July 1958.
>>
>>A company, unknown to me, built the large industrial building that is
>>there
>>now in the 1970s. AT&T took it over about 1981. Today the whole American
>>Viscose site is an industrial park, a housing subdivision and golf course.
>>The old RR bridge is being used to extend utilities to that area.
>
> I'm a little behind in reading email, but I finally found some time to go
> through my old clips from my days as a reporter with the Radford News
> Journal. I found one article, excerpted below, that covers the plant in
> Fairlawn in Pulaski County, across the river from Radford.
>
> The land was originally for a new American Viscose plant to be built in
> the late '40s. In anticipation of this, the N&W extended a branch from the
> east end of Radford yard, crossing the New River on a substantial trestle.
> Although the line was graded on the plant site, the tracks never extended
> past the end of the bridge. FMC Corporation (which I claim was a
> subsidiary of American Viscose; there is/was some connection) built a
> textile plant on the site in 1971. When FMC divested its fiber operations,
> Avtex Fibers was formed to purchase the holdings through a leveraged
> buyout. The plant was closed in September, 1979, and sat vacant until
> March, 1980, when Western Electric purchased the site for a manufacturing
> facility. The plant was again left vacant in the late '80s when AT&T shut
> down operations.
>
> While TerraServer and Google Earth are nice, there is a better alternative
> for many localities in Virginia. The Commonwealth of Virginia did its own
> aerial photography in 2002, much of it in high resolution. Localities have
> access to the data and many have put it on their web sites as part of
> their GIS system. Pulaski County has a site at
> http://arcims2.webgis.net/pulaski/default.asp Click on the small map to
> move to and zoom in on the horseshoe bend in Fairlawn where the plant is
> located. Click to activate the "VGIN Orthophotography" and you will get a
> photo underlayerment once you have zoomed in close enough. Zoom in real
> close and you can see the structure of the trestle as a shadow cast on the
> New River. You can also see the graded right of way into the plant site,
> plus other features.
>
> While trying to track down some details about Avtex/FMC/American Viscose,
> I found a lot of information about the Avtex plant in Front Royal, now a
> Superfund site to clean up years of polution. One interesting site (which
> includes a detailed description of the manufacturing process) is the one
> about Jim Brewer and his friends and construction of a large HO model
> railroad in Glenwood, Maryland, based on a part of the Shenandoah
> Division.
>
> Bruce in Blacksburg
>
> ----------
> Radford News Journal, October 28, 1979
>
> Avtex Fibers officials busy looking for a new tenant
>
> By BRUCE HARPER
> Staff Writer
>
> One month ago, Avtex Fibers closed the doors at its plant in Fairlawn,
> putting 330 people out of work.
>
> Since the closing, Avtex officials have been busy collecting information
> and making contacts in an effort to find a new tenant for the 500,000
> square foot facility.
>
> The site in Fairlawn is in a horseshoe of the New River. It was purchased
> by the American Viscose Company in 1946 as a site for expansion of its
> operations. Some site work was done and a rail connection with the Norfolk
> and Western Railroad was arranged, but the plant was never built.
>
> The 750 acres of land remained with American Viscose and on October 19,
> 1971, plans for a new factory on the site were announced. The plant was
> built for FMC, a subsidiary of American Viscose.
>
> In 1976, the plant became a part of Avtex as FMC redeployed capital to
> other operations with high growth potential.
>
> When the original plans for a plant were made, the decision to build in
> Radford was made because of the New River water supply, the labor market
> and the Norfolk and Western main line.
>
> In 1946, a bridge was built across the New River by the N and W and
> American Viscose. The line ran from the east end of the Radford rail yard
> across a steel trestle, which is stin standing, and onto the Viscose
> property.
>
> According to Don Piedmont, a spokesman for the N and W, the line was never
> put in service. The grade up to the bridge is still visible, but the rails
> and ties have been taken up. Ties and tie plates are still on the bridge,
> but no rails. A large iron plate was erected to keep trespassers from
> crossing the bridge to the Avtex property.
>
> ---------------
> Avtex Fibers
> Partners Mend Site, Sew Quilt of Future Uses
>
> The Avtex Fibers plant was at one time the world's largest producer of
> rayon - an instrumental product for NASA's space shuttle program and for
> parachutes and jump suits made for the Department of War during World War
> II. While the plant enjoyed a proud history producing important
> commodities for the nation and employing thousands of local citizens, it
> also left behind a legacy of contamination and blighted property on the
> banks of the Shenandoah River. Since its closing in 1989, community,
> business, and government partners have worked tirelessly to reverse the
> damage and redevelop the site for future generations to enjoy.
>
> For more than 45 years, the 440-acre Avtex Fibers plant manufactured
> rayon, polyester, and polypropylene fibers for commercial, defense, and
> space industries. It employed over 2,500 people in the area. From 1940
> through 1962, American Viscose owned the facility and FMC Corporation
> (FMC) owned the plant from 1963 until 1976. In 1976, Avtex Fibers, Inc.
> purchased the site from FMC and continued manufacturing operations until
> 1989, when Avtex closed the plant and declared bankruptcy. In June 1986,
> the site was listed on the Superfund program's National Priorities List.
>
> http://www.epa.gov/superfund/accomp/success/avtex.htm
>
> -----------
> Jim Brewer and friends are building a large HO model railroad in Glenwood,
> Maryland. The layout follows the prototypical Norfolk and Western Railroad
> along the Shenandoah River in Virginia in the 1956 period.
>
> http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/rdaniels2/Index.htm
>
> ----------
>
> Movementech works with groups to develop in depth analysis of the context
> of the situation in which they are organizing. One of the key components
> of this type of research is analysis of their opponents: typically
> corporations advancing their own business interests.
>
> http://www.movementech.org/gis/pdf/avtexreport.pdf
>
> -----------------
>
> Once Virginia's largest Superfund site, this former rayon manufacturing
> facility is being recovered to provide a 175 acre eco-friendly office
> park, 30 acres of soccer fields, and 240 acres of conservancy park along
> the Shenandoah River. This Web site provides current information to
> interested parties concerning the redevelopment progress of the Avtex
> Fibers Superfund Site in Front Royal, Virginia.
>
> http://www.avtexfibers.com/
>
> ---------------
> U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) site with photos
> http://www.nao.usace.army.mil/Projects/Environmental%20Projects/Avtex/homepage.asp
>
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