Posts Tagged ‘shipping containers’

Reefer madness coming ashore?

November 2nd, 2011
By: Vicki Bell

This past Labor Day weekend, my husband and I spent a quiet early morning hour on River Street in Savannah, Ga. River Street is a hopping place from mid-morning until late night, filled with people, music, and vendors selling hand-crafted items. It's the home of the second largest St. Patrick's Day parade in the world, and while all the activity, restaurants, and shopping can be fun, we welcomed the peace and quiet as we read placards along the riverside that detailed Savannah's history and watched the river.

As we watched, a barge filled with cargo containers stacked several stories high came into view. From our perspective, it eclipsed the hotel and convention center across the river. We wondered aloud how it would maneuver around the ships docked alongside River Street and clear the Eugene Talmadge Memorial Bridge that spans the river. It didn't appear to be all that easy. Others out for an early morning stroll also stopped and watched the event unfold.

Now, many in the Northwest U.S. and other areas of the globe are on the lookout for some containers that have the potential to deliver much more than goods and entertainment. (more...)

Making the most of metals

September 24th, 2009
By: Eric Lundin

Editors know that fab shop owners wear many (many, many) hats, and depending on the size of the shop, have to be equal parts accountant, purchasing agent, sales manager, marketing guru, safety officer, shop supervisor, process troubleshooter, training manager, human resources department, and maybe even chief cook and bottle washer. Heck, some probably even get to lend a hand on the shop floor once in a while, doing the one thing they probably love the most: running the machines that fabricate metal products. Taking a bigger look at the process sheds some light on a bigger process: The metal cycle. The process starts with a metal ore and ends when the finished item's service life comes to an end when a product is thrown away, a car is junked, or a building is torn down. But the material itself doesn't have to be banished to the scrap heap. Many of the alloys we use today can be recycled many times over, perhaps indefinitely.

(more...)