Jämsänkoski begins refined mechanical pulp production
Rekolankoski groundwood plant
In 1899, the company also acquired Rekolankoski and built a second groundwood plant, as more groundwood was needed for the planned second paper mill. The plant was built of wood, but the adjoining mill was built of brick. The mill part has been preserved and today houses a restaurant. The groundwood plant was equipped with four turbines, three grinding machines and electric lighting. The groundwood was intended only as raw material for the company's own paper mills. The quantity of mechanical pulp produced was totally dependent on the amount of water in the river, as the grinding machines were connected to the turbines by direct power transmission. From time to time, groundwood had to be purchased from elsewhere due to lack of water. The Jämsänkoski groundwood plants were a small unit in the factory complex. In the first half of the 1910s they employed 66 workers in all. When Jämsänkoski became part of United Paper Mills Ltd in 1920, the two groundwood plants had five grinding machines between them, with production rising to 4,000 tonnes in a good year for water. |
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