Government Ships Spend Time At Cascade
This past winter, Portland, Ore.-based Cascade General saw the arrival of several government- owned vessels from homeports such as Southern California and Alaska. The 418- ft. (127.4-m) M.V. Columbia, owned by Alaska Marine Highways was at Cascade for most of the winter for modernization of its public areas in the restaurant and cafe, refurbishment of the car-deck doors, installation of a laundry elevator from the car to cabin deck, and replacement of all windows in the vessel's solarium.
The 30-year-old vessel will undergo an upgrade consisting of new furnishings and food-serving facilities, as well as replacement of galley equipment. Columbia, which carries 941 passengers and 174 cars on the Inland Passage from Bellingham, Wash, to Skagway, Alaska, operates during the summer months. Cascade has worked on the entire Alaska fleet, including the company's newest, the 382-ft. (116.4-m) M.V. Kennicott, which was launched in 1998.
The first of two naval support ships to call on Cascade, was the 668-ft. (203.6-m) MarAd self-unloading containership SS Grand Canyon. The vessel, which is based in Alameda, Calif., was lifted into the yard's Drydock 3 for blasting and coating. The tail shaft and propeller were removed for a complete inspection and repairs were also made to the hatches.
SS Grand Canyon was followed by San Diego-based USNS Guadeloupe, which is a 677-ft. (206.3-m) MSC oiler that is the second in its class to receive a new sternseal system at the yard. The upgrade consisted of the opening of the stern tubes for installation of new piping. Shafts were pulled and the C.P. propellers were dismantled for inspection during this period. The vessel's bottom was also blasted and coated, while a 10 x 70-ft. (3 x 21.3-m) section of sideshell was renewed.
A frequent guest at Cascade's drydock paid another visit this past winter — The Corps of Engineers 350-ft. (106.6-m) dredge vessel Essayons. The vessel, whose territory includes the U.S. West Coast, including Alaska and Hawaii, spent 56 days at the shipyard. Its entire hopper area was staged for a complete steel survey after it was determined that all deteriorated steel be destroyed or replaced. Planning has already commenced in the yard for the vessel's next visit this fall when its entire dredge control system will be replaced with innovative computerized equipment.
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Other stories from May 2002 issue
Content
- Delta Queen Makes A Comeback page: 3
- USS Cole Returns to Fleet page: 4
- Polar Discovery Christened at Avondale page: 7
- Heidenreich Marine Reorganizes Companies page: 8
- Transas Breaks Through Visual Technology page: 8
- Navibulgar Finalizes Varna Shipyard Deal page: 9
- Horbeck-Leevac To Build Eight OSV's page: 9
- Navibulgar Initiates Fleet Renewal Program page: 9
- OSHA Standards Applicable on Uninspected Vessels page: 10
- Munson Delivers PACKCAT to U.S. Navy page: 11
- U.S. Navy Awards Northrop Grumman $ 1 . 3 B LHD Contract page: 11
- Shipboard Life in Style page: 12
- Has the Fast Cat Come to A Halt? page: 15
- Market Changes Mold RoRo Ship Conversions page: 16
- Seville Delivers RoPax Ferry page: 18
- Crankshaft Care Key to Vessel Profitability page: 19
- AIS:When & Where? Here & Now! page: 20
- Crowley Subsidiary Christens ATB page: 24
- Ballast Water Treatment Through Biodispersion page: 26
- LNG Breakthrough For Wartsila page: 29
- New Measures on Ballast Water Management Approval page: 32
- The GMD Group - A Young, Ambitious Team page: 33
- Seven Seas Mariner Undergoes Pod Adjustment page: 34
- Teekay Foam's Discharge Pipe Repaired in Bilbao page: 36
- Government Ships Spend Time At Cascade page: 38
- ASRY Continues Brisk Repair Pace page: 39
- FRP Pumps Offer Lasting Results page: 40
- Spray-On Insulation Cuts Maintenance Costs page: 42
- SEI Temp-Set Reusable Insulation Covers page: 42
- EU to Develop Sulfur Strategy page: 43
- CITGO Offers "No Sheen" Aquamarine Oils page: 43
- Good Fuel = Good Profits page: 44
- Lubes Keep Step With Diesel Development page: 44
- Jeamar's Winches Are Made To Order page: 45
- Victoria Shipyard Racks Up Cruise Ship Jobs page: 45
- Targeting Greek Shipping's $16B Budget page: 46
- Elefsis Helps Speed LNG Retrofit page: 47
- Stelmar Set To Expand Fleet, Receives Tanker page: 51
- HHI: To Infinity & Beyond page: 52
- Dual-Fuel Finds A New Backer page: 57
- U.S. Navy Selects Gold Team For DD(X) page: 57
- Packing Solutions Help Bear Set Sail page: 57