A Greek freighter picks up a load of wheat at the Koppel Grain Terminal on Pier F soon after its opening in 1961. |
For 50 years, one of the more distinctive buildings dotting the Port of Long Beach's skyline has been a set of silos on Pier F.
A worker takes a sample of grain from a conveyor belt inside the silos. |
In 1979, the grain terminal was taken over by Agrex, Inc., a subsidiary of Mitsubishi, and in 1987 the grain facility was converted to handle petroleum coke for Koch Carbon, and it is still in operation today.
Click here to see a photo gallery of the terminal then and now.
The terminal today is a facility for petroleum coke. |
1 comment:
In 1976 the grain terminal went through a modernization to add the metal building on top of the main structure for screening as well as a complete replacement of the shipping gallery along the dock with a new gallery and a traveling, sluffing, slewing and telescoping shiploader. This 1976 project cost approximately $6 million.
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