Gomaco Trolley Company

Gomaco Trolley Company
Division, Gomaco Corporation
Industry Transportation
Founded 1982
Headquarters Ida Grove, Iowa, United States
Products Streetcars
Services Streetcar restoration/rebuilding
Website www.gomacotrolley.com

The Gomaco Trolley Company is a manufacturer of vintage-style streetcars (alternatively called trolleys in the USA, or trams in much of the world), located in Ida Grove, Iowa, United States. The company has supplied replica-vintage streetcars to several transit systems in the USA, and has also restored and rebuilt authentic vintage streetcars for some systems.

History

Gomaco-built Brill-type vintage-trolley replica on the Portland Vintage Trolley service, in downtown Portland, Oregon.

Established in 1982, Gomaco Trolley Company is a division of Gomaco Corporation, a major builder of equipment used in concrete paving. Founded in 1965 by Harold Godbersen,[1] the parent company's name, "Gomaco", is a contraction of the words Godbersen Manufacturing Company.[2]

Gomaco Corporation first branched out into the field of trolley manufacturing in 1982, when it was the successful bidder on a contract to supply two reproductions of "turn-of-the-century"-era trolleys/streetcars for operation on a new line due to be built at the Lowell National Historical Park, in Lowell, Massachusetts.[3][4] The two cars (1601–2) were replicas of 15-bench, open-sided streetcars built in 1902 by the J. G. Brill Company for the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway.[4] The construction was all-new, except for their trucks, which Gomaco obtained from retired Melbourne, Australia streetcars and refurbished and adapted for use with the cars it was building for Lowell. These first two Gomaco streetcars were delivered in 1983/84. The Lowell streetcar line opened in May 1984, and was well-received, leading to the historical park's placing another order with Gomaco later, for one enclosed car of similar faux-vintage style, which was delivered in 1987 (car 4131).[5]

Gomaco-built 15-bench open car (No. 1976) on the TECO Line in Tampa, in 2008.

In the mid-1980s, Gomaco built two more 15-bench, open-style cars. Car 1976 was a conventional streetcar with a trolley pole on its roof, while car 1977 was fitted with an on-board generator, so that it could be operated on existing tracks, on a trial basis, without need for overhead trolley wires. The two cars were demonstrators which the company loaned to a few different operators. Ultimately, car 1977 was acquired by the Platte Valley Trolley, in Denver, Colorado, andmany years latercar 1976 by HART for the 2002-opened TECO Line Streetcar System in Tampa, Florida.

Gradual expansion, new designs

Subsequently, Gomaco Trolley Company has won contracts from other operators to build or rebuild vintage streetcars and, unlike with the Lowell line, Gomaco's later products have mostly been used by public transit agencies, for regular service along city streets. In 1991–92, the company provided four streetcars to TriMet, in Portland, Oregon, for use on the Portland Vintage Trolley service, which began operation in late 1991. Similar to the "Lowell enclosed" model, these were replicas of 1904 Brill-built, double-truck cars, patterned on streetcars that had been operated locally, in Portland. However, in this instance the replicas would be sharing the tracks with modern light rail cars of TriMet's MAX system, so while Gomaco based the new bodies on the 1904 cars, the trucks were a younger style (1940s/'50s) which the company assembled from parts it acquired from Boston streetcars and Chicago rapid-transit cars.[2] The four Portland cars (511–514) also were equipped with modern features such as Automatic Train Stop.

Gomaco-built replica double-truck Birney cars on the River Rail Streetcar in Little Rock.

During the mid- and late 1990s, Gomaco restored and rebuilt several ex-Melbourne W2-type streetcars for Memphis' Main Street Trolley and also sold to the Memphis Area Transit Authority a single-truck car it had built all-new in 1993 as a demonstrator.[6]

Interior of Tampa replica Birney car 429, built in 2000. The seat backs are reversible.

In more recent years, the company has supplied new replica Birney streetcars to the TECO Line Streetcar System, in Tampa; to the River Rail Streetcar, in Little Rock, Arkansas;[7] and to the Charlotte Area Transit System, in Charlotte, North Carolina, for use on the Charlotte Trolley.[8] These cars used trucks taken from 1920s-vintage Peter Witt-type streetcars which Gomaco acquired from Milan, Italy, and refurbished.[9]

Gomaco Trolley added a new model in 2002, with the introduction of the "reconditioned Peter Witt", which is the refurbishing of a complete Peter Witt streetcar, rather than only using its trucks. A large number of Peter Witt streetcars remain in regular service in Milan in 2009, but the operator of Milan's tramway network, ATM, has retired some in recent years, and Gomaco purchased a number of these cars from ATM, for possible reconditioning for customers in North America.

The company also takes orders from customers who only want a replica trolley body, not a complete and functioning car. In 2006, it built a replica of half of a Peter Witt trolley car for decorative use as a cover to the entrance to an underground trolley station (of SEPTA) at the University of Pennsylvania campus in Philadelphia, the 37th Street station. It was patterned exactly after the particular style of Peter Witt car that served Philadelphiain large numbersstarting in the mid-1920s.[10] The replica was a gift to the school from its Class of 1956.[11]

Gomaco has also built at least one battery-powered streetcar. In 2008, it delivered two open cars to Glendale, California's Americana at Brand shopping development: one a 33-foot-long battery-powered car and the other a 22-foot-long unpowered passenger car (trailer).[12] The powered car is equipped with a wheelchair lift.[13]

See also

References

  1. "All about Ida Grove". City of Ida Grove. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  2. 1 2 Morgan, Steve (Spring 1992). "Portland's New/Old Trolleys". The New Electric Railway Journal. Free Congress Foundation. ISSN 1048-3845. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  3. Saitta, Joseph P. (ed.) (1984). Traction Yearbook '84, p. 28. Merrick, New York (USA): Traction Slides International. ISSN 0730-5400.
  4. 1 2 Horlyk, Earl (March 22, 2008). "Artist works airbrush magic on trolley". Sioux City Journal. Retrieved June 1, 2009.
  5. Young, Andrew D. (1997). Veteran & Vintage Transit, p. 52. St. Louis: Archway Publishing. ISBN 0-9647279-2-7.
  6. Wilkins, Van (Spring 1996). "Heritage Trolleys in Memphis and Galveston". The New Electric Railway Journal. Free Congress Foundation. ISSN 1048-3845. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  7. Harnack, Leah (July 2006). "Making More with Less". Mass Transit magazine. Cygnus Publishing. ISSN 0364-3484. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  8. "Charlotte, North Carolina, Debuts New Trolley Cars, October 16, 2004". Gomaco Trolley Company. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  9. "APTA Streetcar and Heritage Trolley Site: Rolling Stock". American Public Transportation Association. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  10. "'Trolley' Subway Entrance - October 2006". Gomaco Trolley Company. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  11. "Class of 1956 Trolley / 37th & Spruce @ Woodland Avenue". University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on 2008-04-02. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  12. "Glendale, California - 'Americana at Brand' Project". Gomaco Trolley Company. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  13. "Property Features". The Americana at Brand. Retrieved October 15, 2010.
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Coordinates: 42°20′53″N 95°27′51″W / 42.348°N 95.464167°W / 42.348; -95.464167

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