Work begins for repair of depot's deck
Work to repair the wooden deck around the Whitefish Train Depot downtown began last week.
The deck on the historic building was damaged at the end of November when the driver of a pickup truck crashed into the corner of the deck.
A crew from North Country Builders began demolition of the damaged portion of the deck last week and by Monday were already rebuilding the support beams for the deck.
Leo Keane, owner of North Country Builders, said he expects most of the area that was damaged to be repaired by next week.
“We saved what we could and we will reuse part of the decking,” he said. “It needs an all new foundation and framework.”
Keane said the portions of the decking that can’t be salvaged will have to be replaced with new decking specially milled for the project by RBM Lumber in Columbia Falls.
The deck on the depot was completely rebuilt in 2013. North Country was also the contractor on that project.
The Stumptown Historical Society has owned the depot building since 1990 and operates the Stumptown Museum inside it.
Great Northern Railway constructed the depot building in 1928 with the design in the Alpine-style reminiscent of the lodges in Glacier National Park. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.