Facility Feature
Encompass Grain & Rail Co-op Adds Steel Tank at Allen Station

Encompass Grain & Rail Co-op’s rail-loading elevator at Allen Station near San Jose, IL with new 790,643-bushel Sukup steel tank at far right.

Coop sees bigger steps ahead as central Illinois yields point to use as true terminal location

San Jose, IL — Encompass Grain & Rail Co-op had an immediate need to add storage for its growing Central Illinois market, with corn yield trend lines pointing toward goals further down the road.

During the summer of 2019, Delavan, IL-based Encompass added a Sukup 105-foot-diameter, 790,643-bushel steel tank at its Allen Station elevator near San Jose, IL (309-247-3522), bringing total storage there to 4.5 million bushels.

With the U.S. 136 and Illinois 29 highways meeting nearby and the capability of loading unit trains on the Union Pacific, Allen Station’s central location among the coop’s seven facilities is ideally suited for bigger plans, according to James Richardson, the coop’s network operations manager.

“In the past, we were trucking corn away from here, and now we’re transferring in a lot of corn from other locations,” Richardson says. “We’re trying to operate this location as a true terminal, with our other six locations being satellite sites and all the grain funneling through here.”

Encompass operates semi-trucks at all locations and also can load trains at both Allen Station and Delavan. The 110-car shuttle loader at Allen Station sends corn to feed markets in the South and also exports grain to Mexico on the Union Pacific. Richardson says Encompass hopes eventually to load up to 40 trains a year through Allen Station.

Allen Station location center of coop

Encompass was founded in 2015 with the merger of Farmers Grain and Coal Company and Taloma Farmers Grain Company. Allen Station is located roughly in the center of the cooperative’s service area, which also includes elevators in Brownwood, Delavan, Greenview, Mason City, New Holland, and Teheran.

Grain Flo Inc. (309- 473-2512), out of nearby Heyworth, IL, was chosen as the contractor for the $3 million project. Grain Flo previously built everything on the site, which originally was constructed in 1990, except the concrete tank, Richardson says.

The new tank was erected by Wieber Steel Construction, Altamont, SD (605-874-8247). The setup features the new steel tank with a 2,000-bushel mechanical receiving pit, 25,000-bph Schlagel drag conveyor, and 25,000-bph GSI receiving leg using two rows of Maxi-Lift 14x8 TigerTuff buckets mounted on a 36-inch Continental belt.

A Y-valve drops grain onto 25,000-bph overhead GSI enclosed belt conveyors either running to the new tank or back to existing storage c and equipment.

The new 105-foot tank stands 99 feet tall at the eave and 127 feet tall at the peak. Temperatures in the tank are monitored by a Rolfes@Boone 24-cable system, and aeration is handled by four 60-hp Chicago Blower centrifugal fans delivering 1/8 cfm per bushel on coarse grains. A zero-entry Daay paddle sweep cleans out the grain. The tank empties onto another 25,000-bph GSI belt conveyor in an above-ground tunnel.

In addition to the tank, a new 70-foot-x-12-foot Fairbanks pitless outbound scale was installed to improve the flow of trucks through the facility.

Rail loadout capacity moves trucks quickly

“We wanted to keep that (truck) flow going,” says General Manager Kris Roberts. “No. 1, we have the dumping capacity now. No. 2, we can load out on rail, so we can move a lot of the trucks really quickly. Now we can actually transfer grain in and not disrupt the truck line.”

The project’s aim, he explains, was to add storage with an integrated system that could plug into additional new storage as needed.

“With the trend line growth you see in production, in theory as a company, we have to build a 105-foot tank every other year just to keep up across our seven facilities,” Roberts says.

According to Roberts, what came out of a need for loading trains and receiving grain at the same time revealed an opportunity to transform a country elevator into a centralized terminal.

“We just didn’t know it until we were forced to see it,” Roberts says.

New 25,000-bph GSI receiving leg deposits grain onto one of two 25,000-bph overhead GSI enclosed belt conveyors.

Company Info, Encompass Grain & Rail Co-Op

  • Delavan, IL • 309-244-7541
  • Founded • 2015
  • Storage capacity • 19 million bushels at seven locations
  • Annual volume • 20 million bushels
  • Annual revenues • $100 million
  • Number of members • 1,000
  • Number of employees • 32
  • Crops handled • Corn, soybeans, soft red winter wheat
  • Services • Grain handling, trucking

Key personnel

  • Kris Roberts, general manager
  • James Richardson, network operations manager
  • Jeff Bass, location manager

Supplier List

  • Aeration fans • Chicago Blower
  • Aeration system • Decatur Aeration
  • Bin sweeps • GSI/Daay
  • Bucket elevators • GSI
  • Catwalks • Grain Flo Inc.
  • Concrete • Wagenbach Builders
  • Construction staking • Land Engineers LLC
  • Control system • KDJ Sales & Service Inc.
  • Contractor/millwright • Grain Flo Inc.
  • Conveyors • GSI, Schlagel Inc.
  • Conveyor belting • Continental Belt
  • Elevator buckets • Maxi-Lift Inc.
  • Electrical contractor • KDJ Sales & Service Inc.
  • Engineering • SKS Engineers, Mohr & Kerr Engineering and Land Surveying, CCJSE Engineering
  • Grain temperature system • Rolfes@Boone
  • Leg belting • Continental Belt
  • Level indicators • KDJ Sales & Service Inc.
  • Liner • General Rubber
  • Motors • Siemens
  • Receiving building • Sukup Mfg. Co.
  • Screeners • InterSystems
  • Speed reducers • Dodge
  • Steel storage • Sukup Mfg. Co.
  • Steel tank erection • Wieber Steel Construction
  • Tower support system • GSI
  • Truck scale • Fairbanks Scales

- John Reidy, associate editor

Reprinted from November/December 2019 GRAIN JOURNAL

​Outbound grain truck is weighed on a new Fairbanks pitless truck scale. Ground level photos by Ed Zdrojewski.​

In This Issue

Grain Journal Nov/Dec 2019

View this feature and more in the Grain Journal Nov/Dec 2019 magazine.