Early Ownership and Consolidation
Transition to Regional Operations and Rebirth

The line was subsequently sold off from the larger Class I railroad and operated independently with small switching operations around Montrose and Delta with limited slow coal train movement out from Crested Butte. This led to the original smaller eventually falling into bankruptcy, allowing the more established Sur Rail to purchase with rail line in conjunction with the Marshal Pass route. The corridor’s fortunes were completely reversed in the early 2010s following the discovery of massive, deep earth copper and polymetallic deposits in the rugged mountains between Ridgway and Ouray. With global demand for industrial copper surging, moving the immense tonnage out of the San Juans by truck proved economically and logistically impossible.

In an ambitious, multi-million-dollar infrastructure project, the entire corridor from Delta through Montrose was thoroughly rehabilitated, and the eastern line to Gunnison was completely rehabilitated as well to heavy haul specifications. Most notably, a brand new, modern industrial branch line, the Ouray Copper Branch, was engineered and blasted out of the canyon walls, extending south from Ridgway to tap directly into the newly established mountain mining complexes following much of the original Rio Grande Southern right of way.

The Crested Butte Branch and the Public Service Energy Corridor
Growth and Modern Operations

Trains

Montrose to Arvada Train

Molybdenum Ore, Crude Oil, Steel Coils, Gas, Molybdenum, Fertilizer

Montrose to Antero Train

Paper, Fertilizer, Coil Steel, Recycle Paper

Montrose Switch

Limestone

Gunnison Switch

Molybdenum

Ouray Copper Train

Copper Ore

Montrose to Grand Junction UP Transfer Train
The Denver Terminal Railway Through Trains
The Denver Terminal Railway Through Trains