The News (New Glasgow)

Trenton’s industrial history sold

- BY AARON BESWICK

With the auctioneer performing linguistic acrobatics sounding like some new strain of urban hip-hop, the salesman surveyed the crowd.

Three massive presses capable of flattening huge sheets of steel as thick as a brick were on the block.

“I told (the auctioneer) ‘You buy me dinner and tell me the names of the people that didn’t win and I’ll come help out,’” said Steven Bonnay, regional sales manager for Davi.

His company built the three presses. Bonnay was on hand to answer questions and try to sell gear to the folks who missed out.

The presses, like everything other than the walls and the lights, went up for auction last week as the province’s brief foray into wind turbine tower manufactur­ing comes to an end.

Corporate Assets Inc. auctioned off 2,000 items ranging from 40tonne cranes to old rail cars, hand tools and even a wheelbarro­w with a flat tire.

Then there is the modern, lightly used equipment required to take plates of steel and roll them into wind turbines.

In 2010, then-premier Darrell Dexter came to the former railcar manufactur­ing plant in Trenton to announce the province was pumping $60 million into a new joint venture with Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng and Marine Engineerin­g.

Daewoo put in $20.4 million and retained a 51 per cent stake in the new manufactur­er of turbine towers dubbed DSME Trenton.

According to David Boyd of Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, the province hopes to recoup $5 million to $6 million of its investment.

“Daewoo was not a secured creditor, they were a shareholde­r,” said Boyd, senior vicepresid­ent for the court appointed receiver. “The (DSME Trenton) closed. Daewoo would have taken the loss on the books.”

Built in 1912, the four 300metre-long buildings are now quiet testaments to Trenton’s industrial history.

Millions of artillery shells were manufactur­ed within their walls to feed the guns of the First World War.

At peak activity during the 1970s, some 2,500 people worked building rail cars at the heart of a community busy with the life that comes with decent paying blue collar jobs.

Now the buildings belong to Nova Scotia Lands Inc., a Crown corporatio­n that will seek to lure new industry to them.

Attempts over the past two years during which they were kept in an idled state, however, failed.

Corporate Assets Incorporat­ed was waiting in the wings.

“We kept an eye on their status,” said Ryan Haas, who heads the auctioneer­ing outfit.

By New Year’s Day 2019, his team will have travelled to 11 more industrial sites around North America for similar sales.

At the security building out front, the discussion among the guards was the future of Smokey the cat (known to some employees as Sammy).

“She’s the last of the plant mousers,” said John Boehk.

For 16 years Smokey has been a diligent caretaker, roaming the Trenton Works plant and hunting vermin.

After she had a litter of kittens some years back, workers at the plant passed the hat to get her fixed.

They’ve been feeding her ever since.

“She’s friendly enough, but she’s used to her freedom,” said Boehk. “If you tried to keep her as a house cat, she’d just walk out the door. She’d probably end up back here.”

 ?? SALTWIRE NETWORK PHOTO ?? The 2,000 items for sale at the auction at the former DSME Trenton facility range from hand tools to heavy duty manufactur­ing equipment valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars. Pictured is one of three presses capable of flattening sheets of steel up to three inches thick. - Aaron Beswick
SALTWIRE NETWORK PHOTO The 2,000 items for sale at the auction at the former DSME Trenton facility range from hand tools to heavy duty manufactur­ing equipment valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars. Pictured is one of three presses capable of flattening sheets of steel up to three inches thick. - Aaron Beswick

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