Industry | Shipbuilding, Energy, Industry |
---|---|
Fate | Dissolved |
Predecessor | Albion Iron Works, Spratt and Kriemler, Harbour Marine Company |
Founded | May 4, 1863 |
Founder | Joseph Spratt |
Defunct | May 1994 |
Headquarters | Victoria, British Columbia, Canada |
Key people
|
Johann Kriemler Co-founder |
Products | Ferries, Naval vessels, Oil platforms, Boilers, Ammonia production equipment, Manhole covers,Wood-burning stoves (starting in 1878) |
Victoria Machinery Depot Ltd. was a ship builder located in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
This was a historic metalworks and shipyard in Victoria, Canada. From the late 1850s on, with the Fraser Canyon and Cariboo Gold Rushes British Columbia (BC) was dependent upon Californian supplies and ships. To prevent United States domination of the British Colony, Governor James Douglas passed laws restricting US shipping. To encourage BC shipping a yard and ironworks was established—the Albion Iron Works was started by Joseph Spratt on May 4, 1863.
The name derives from the Latin word Alba for white, itself a reference to the white cliffs of Dover or, more often, Scotland. British Columbia was known as New Albion for a time and hence the name of the iron works. The first yard sat on the south bank of Victoria's inner harbour on Bay Street, just before the Bay Street bridge at Point Ellice. The yard turned out boilers, engines, and pipes for early steamers. The hulls were made of wood on slips in the yard. Later the yard turned out ships, like the sternwheeler SS Mount Royal. Albion Iron Works went through several business changes and merged with Victoria Machinery Depot, taking the latter's name in 1888. It did essential war work in both world wars.
Later on the yard turned out several BC Ferries vessels.
In 1965–1967 it also made the oil drilling platform Sedco 135-F for exploration by Shell Canada in Hecate Strait. At the time of its construction Sedco 135-F was the largest semi-submersible platform in the world and was the first platform constructed in British Columbia. The CA$$10 million rig rose 50 metres above the water in the docks at VMD (before submersion). After the 1967 launch and 3 years of exploration off the BC coast it was towed and worked at oil fields in New Zealand, the North Sea, and the Gulf of Mexico. The Sedco 135-F is often mentioned as the rig that suffered the blowout resulting in the . At that time hower, the Sedco 135-F was working in Brazil. It was the original Sedco 135, the first of the series built at Ingalls Shipbuilding in 1965, that suffered the blowout. The Sedco 135-F was one of the last seagoing vessels built by VMD.