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Farmland
Industries, Inc.
Fertilizer Storage
By Freda
Grones
Farmland
Industries, Inc., the largest cooperative of farmers and ranchers in North
America, completed a two-dome facility for storage of dry fertilizer in
Seargent Bluff, Iowa. The larger dome is 120' in diameter and 60' high,
while the smaller is 115' in diameter and 58' high.
Loy Bakken,
Terminal Superintendent and Manager for Farmland, described its operation
which began in March 1995. "Our facility in Sergeant Bluff is on
the Missouri River, about as far in as a float barge can get," he
said. "It stores dry fertilizer manufactured in various areas of
the United States and overseas and shipped via ocean-going [ships]."
The bulk
fertilizer is transferred onto barges, then shipped up the river. When
the barges arrive at the domes, it is dipped with a clam shell bucket
and put into the dome.
Finally,
an elaborate truck-loading system loads it onto semi-trucks for transportation
to distribution centers. Computerization makes it possible for just a
skeleton crew to run this entire operation. Linden Fielding, after recently
revisiting Farmland's dome, said, "I was really impressed with its
cleanliness. Great efforts are taken in handling the fertilizer. Nothing
is scattered."
Since moisture
turns dry fertilizer into unusable mud that eventually dissolves, Loy
Bakken favored constructing a dome rather than a wooden, shingled A-frame
used in many places. He said, "I worked at such a structure for many
years. We had constant repairs because shingles blew off and the fertilizer
actually began eating into the wood. It was like having a monster consuming
the structure that housed it.
"As
far as moisture goes," Bakken continued, "the Airform makes
the difference. It's sealed so there are no seams and that makes the top
and sides moisture-proof. Then too, Polyurethane helps tremendously. Concrete
alone probably would draw more moisture."
Farmland
did consider structures other than a Monolithic Dome. Bakken said, "At
first, construction costs of a dome seemed much higher. But the further
we got into it, the more the prices came together. The cost of constant
upkeep finally decided it, and we would definitely do it again. We've
not had problems or disappointments.
Farmland's
Sergeant Bluff storage facility has had visitors from its own neighborhood
and from places as distant as China. Bakken said, "The China delegation
got to go inside a dome that was vacant at the time; they saw the internal
portion. Their reaction seemed favorable."
Printed
in the Spring 1998 Roundup
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The
modern, two
Monolithic Dome, dry fertilizer storage facility of
Farmland Industries, Inc. An advanced computerized system allows
a small crew run the facility. The Monolithic Dome is very good
at keeping the stored material dry and the concrete walls of the
dome also resist the corrosive effects of the fertilizer.

Double Dome fertilizer
storage facility at Sergeant Bluff, Iowa. One is 120' diameter
60' high, one is 115' diameter 58' high.
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