• Upstream
  • Pipelines & Transport
  • Downstream
Sunday, October 26, 2025
Oil&Gas Advancement
OFFSHORE ENERGY
  • Home
  • News
    Khor-Mor-Gas-Field-in-Iraq

    Khor Mor Gas Field in Iraq to Increase Its Output by 50%

    Oil And Gas Discovery in Orange Basin

    Oil and Gas Discovery in Orange Basin Offshore Namibia

    Oil and Gas Needs More Investment

    OPEC+ Stresses that Oil and Gas Needs More Investment

    Rosebank Oil Field Project

    Equinor Makes Fresh Case to Drill Rosebank Oil Field Project

    Predictable Oil Gas Supply from Norway

    Oil Giants Prefer Predictable Oil & Gas Supply from Norway

    Offshore Oil and Gas

    $4bn Offshore Oil-And-Gas Project Launched in Qatar

    Petroleum Industry of Serbia

    U.S. Puts Sanctions on the Petroleum Industry of Serbia

    27 Stake by QatarEnergy

    27% Stake by QatarEnergy in North Cleopatra Offshore Egypt

    Oil and Gas Permission

    Oil And Gas Permission Still on During US Shutdown

  • Projects
    Khor-Mor-Gas-Field-in-Iraq

    Khor Mor Gas Field in Iraq to Increase Its Output by 50%

    27 Stake by QatarEnergy

    27% Stake by QatarEnergy in North Cleopatra Offshore Egypt

    Tamboran to acquire Falcon Oil Gas

    Tamboran to Acquire Falcon Oil & Gas in Australia

    Subsea Production Systems

    TechnipFMC Gets Petrobras Subsea Production Systems Deal

    Oil and Gas Exploration

    Egypt Signs 3 Deals worth Over $121M for Oil and Gas Exploration

    13bn Worth Iraq Project

    QatarEnergy, TotalEnergies Partner $13bn Worth Iraq Project

    25 Billion LNG Project

    McDermott Gets Key Contract for $25 Billion LNG Project

    4bn New Israeli Gas Offtake Contracts

    Energean Lands $4bn New Israeli Gas Offtake Contracts

    LNG Procurement and Trading

    Singapore-China Apply Cap on LNG Procurement and Trading

  • Whitepapers

    OGA 2017 Post Show Report

    US Polyethylene Export Market Report 2017-2020

    US Polyethylene Export Market Report 2017-2020

    Embedded SSD Flash Management

    Enterprise SSD: More Than Just a New Kind of Hard Drive

    Efficiency, Visibility and Reliability Keys to lower costs and greater profitability in oil and gas operations

    Don’t Miss the Unconventional Resource Revolution’s Next Wave

    Better Safety, Better Business: Maintain Compliance and Drive Revenue: Put All of Your Data to Work

    Breaking the Application Barrier: Why Data is the Most Valuable Asset in the Oil and Gas Industry

    Drilling Optimization Through Advanced Analytics Using Historical and Real-Time Data

  • Press Releases
    Cloudera and Aramco Plan to Collaborate on AI driven Digital Innovation in Saudi Arabia

    Cloudera and Aramco Plan to Collaborate on AI-driven Digital Innovation in Saudi Arabia

    Youth-Empowerment at Namibia Oil and Gas Conference 2025

    Namibia Oil and Gas Conference 2025 Announces Future Generations Masterclass in Partnership with the Namibia Youth Energy Forum

    Alaska LNG

    Glenfarne Announces Over $115 Billion of Strategic Partner Interest for Alaska LNG

    agreements with US companies

    Aramco announces 34 MoUs and agreements with US companies

    Sinopec Sets New Vertical Well Depth

    Sinopec Sets New Vertical Well Depth Record of 5,300 Meters

    Jubail Asset Integrity

    Jubail to Host the 3rd Asset Integrity and Process Safety Conference & Exhibition 2025

    IPTC 2025 Launched: Driving Innovation, Sustainability, and Excellence in Energy

    Ocean Business announces exhibitor list for 2025 show

    Ocean Business 2025 conference programme announced

  • Market Reports
    LongTerm Interests of Russia Saudi Arabia

    OPEC+ Key to Long-Term Interests of Russia, Saudi Arabia

    Oil and Gas Permission

    Oil And Gas Permission Still on During US Shutdown

    AI Technology Maturing the Oil and Gas Workforce

    AI & Technology Maturing the Oil and Gas Workforce

    HDPE Market in Oil and Gas

    HDPE Market in Oil and Gas: Trends and Global Forecast

    Top 5 Oil and Gas Sector Trends that are Active in 2025

    Oil-and-Gas-Analytics

    Oil and Gas Analytics Market Growth Trends and Forecast

    Gas-Transportation

    Transport Capacity – Key to Gas Sector Growth in India

    Offshore-Drilling

    Namibia Showcases its Offshore Drilling Activities

    Global-Oil

    Demand for Global Oil to Grow to Almost 104 mb/d in 2025

  • Events
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Oil&Gas Advancement
No Result
View All Result
Home Upstream Drilling

Source Energy Services Enlists Legacy Building Solutions to Construct Large Frac Sand Facility

in Drilling, Press Releases, Upstream
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is a major buzzword within oil and gas production in the US and Canada today. As this drilling technique continues to expand, the demand on material producers to deliver frac sand to aid in the fracturing process has naturally grown along with it.

Source Energy Services (SES) is one of the fastest-growing industrial sand suppliers in North America. The company’s mining and processing operation in Sumner, Wisconsin, is believed to be one of the largest production facilities for silica sand. This single location is set up to produce more than two million tonnes of proppant annually. Sand from Wisconsin is then delivered to storage terminals positioned near key shale plays across the continent.

Local infrastructure in many cities and surrounding areas hasn’t developed fast enough to keep pace with booming oil and gas activity. Production and support companies themselves have had to grow so fast that many have resorted to makeshift options, particularly when it comes to erecting any buildings required for their operations.

SES has been determined to avoid the pitfalls of growing too quickly. Rather than putting up lesser structures that only meet immediate needs, the company strives to be at the forefront of trends and facility builds, ensuring that their buildings will continue to serve them well for the long-haul.

SES vice-president of construction Mike Miller said: “By today’s standards, the buildings we’re designing are of world-class caliber in the US and Canada.” This was the mindset at work when determining how to proceed with the company’s new frac sand distribution facility in Wembley, Alberta.

The purpose of the building was to provide large-format sand storage for the area’s oil and gas industry. Upon completion, it became the largest facility for this purpose in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. The facility is capable of receiving several unit trains on a monthly basis, with each train usually carrying more than 10,000t of material. By contrast, Miller noted that most transload distribution centers in the area provide around 2,000t for an oil or gas frac.

Miller added: “We have a ‘tank farm’ using 300t tanks around 25km away that was constructed as a transload storage facility for many suppliers. However, as drillers have been needing to facilitate larger fracs, silos or tank transloads do not have the operational capacity to fill those needs. The large-format facility in Wembley is designed to solve any supply issues that a driller would ever have, mainly a reliable source of sand.”

In keeping with its philosophy of advancing its construction methods and facilities to a higher level, while still taking into account the timeline required to engineer and construct a new building, SES focused its search on tension fabric building contractors. After reviewing and comparing specifications, materials and costs from a handful of manufacturers, SES selected Legacy Building Solutions for the project.

Miller said: “Legacy offered several features that put them at the top of the list. We were very impressed by their engineering team. They are unique among fabric buildings in that they build on a rigid steel frame. Everything looked good, from the eave and ridge ventilation system to the method for installing fabric panels. Combined with material delivery times and the time to construct, Legacy seemed like the perfect choice for our application.”

In the design phase, SES worked to define exact requirements in order to narrow the parameters of the facility. One key goal was to house all workers and operations inside the building, protected from the constantly gusting winds of the Alberta prairie. This type of initiative could have resulted in a massive structure exceeding the scope of what was truly required, but SES and Legacy worked together closely to come up with the appropriate heights and lengths, as well as multiple lean-to areas.

The outcome was a building designed to allow the full use of its storage volume of almost three million cubic feet. The main body of the fabric structure measures an impressive 140ft by 480ft, with three lean-to sections measuring 60ft by 40ft, 60ft by 80ft and 24ft by 200ft, respectively, adding up to a total of 79,200ft². An offset peak and varying leg heights further characterize a building that is fully customized for the specific facility envisioned by SES.

Miller added: “We have a drive aisle that connects the entire building at its core and allows us access to our stockpiles. We use two of the lean-to spaces to load our feed hoppers and the other lean-to is a heated shop that has lined walls and is equipped with infrared heating units. We have 18ft by 18ft access doors big enough for loaders and skid steers to enter. The whole design is very efficient for our operations.”

The rigid frame design of the Legacy building proved beneficial, as SES implemented plans for a conveyor that would be suspended from the rafters and run the length of the building. After performing a structural analysis and determining load requirements, the structural design was easily modified to accommodate the conveyor system.

Milller said: “Flexibility is key, especially when the building is a first-of-its-kind for this industry. We had one design change after the whole plan was in place, to widen our trapeze in the structure that supports the conveyor, and Legacy was able to make that change without any problem. The conveyor system fits and operates just as it was designed.”

According to Miller, SES is always looking to design facilities that use natural sunlight, which made Legacy’s 15oz, fire-rated polyethylene roof that allows abundant daylight to permeate the structure, a perfect solution for the new facility.

Miller added: “In far northern Alberta in the summer, the sun stays high for a long period of time, so we take full advantage of any light we can get. We believe naturally lit areas are good for worker morale, since they feel more connected to the outside environment. And, of course, it also saves on our facility operating cost, since the fabric allows us to work with the internal lighting systems off, even on cloudy days.”

The facility in Wembley officially opened on schedule on 3 June 2014, despite a rough Canadian winter that set SES’ concrete contractor behind by more than a month on installing the building’s foundation.

Miller said: “Legacy knew our schedule and saved us more than 30 days of downtime. They stood the frames for the entire fabric structure in a single day and everything, conveyors, electrical and fabric, was completed within five weeks of them coming to the site. It was a Herculean effort on Legacy’s part; it was fantastic.”

As part of its continued growth to support fracking operations and other exploration activity, SES is working toward several other new facilities in the near future, and Legacy figures to be a part of the picture.

Miller added: “They have a very passionate team, from top to bottom. In all respects, from design to pricing to production, Legacy is one of the best building contractors I’ve ever worked with. I look forward to working with them again.”

Previous Post

Sica and Lean Manufacturing: a Greater Advantage for Clients

Next Post

BPL’s Accreditation Hat-Trick

Related Posts

Khor-Mor-Gas-Field-in-Iraq
News

Khor Mor Gas Field in Iraq to Increase Its Output by 50%

October 24, 2025
Oil And Gas Discovery in Orange Basin
News

Oil and Gas Discovery in Orange Basin Offshore Namibia

October 24, 2025
Oil and Gas Needs More Investment
Middle East & South Asia

OPEC+ Stresses that Oil and Gas Needs More Investment

October 24, 2025
LongTerm Interests of Russia Saudi Arabia
Market Reports

OPEC+ Key to Long-Term Interests of Russia, Saudi Arabia

October 23, 2025
Rosebank Oil Field Project
News

Equinor Makes Fresh Case to Drill Rosebank Oil Field Project

October 17, 2025
Predictable Oil Gas Supply from Norway
News

Oil Giants Prefer Predictable Oil & Gas Supply from Norway

October 17, 2025
Next Post

BPL's Accreditation Hat-Trick

LatestNews

Oil And Gas Discovery in Orange Basin
News

Oil and Gas Discovery in Orange Basin Offshore Namibia

October 24, 2025
Oil and Gas Needs More Investment
Middle East & South Asia

OPEC+ Stresses that Oil and Gas Needs More Investment

October 24, 2025
Rosebank Oil Field Project
News

Equinor Makes Fresh Case to Drill Rosebank Oil Field Project

October 17, 2025
Predictable Oil Gas Supply from Norway
News

Oil Giants Prefer Predictable Oil & Gas Supply from Norway

October 17, 2025
Offshore Oil and Gas
News

$4bn Offshore Oil-And-Gas Project Launched in Qatar

October 15, 2025
Petroleum Industry of Serbia
Downstream

U.S. Puts Sanctions on the Petroleum Industry of Serbia

October 13, 2025
Tashkent Uzbekistan 2026

About Us

Oil & Gas Advancement is a specialized platform delivering latest news and industry insights for the global oil and gas sector. Featuring market intelligence, expert opinions, events and updates, it serves as a trusted and strategic resource for industry stakeholders navigating energy transitions.

Subscribe Us

Resources

  • Advertise with us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter Archive
  • Download Mediapack

System

  • Search
  • Site Map
  • RSS Feed
  • Upstream
  • Pipelines & Transport
  • Downstream

© 2025 Copyright Valuemediaservices 2025 All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Projects
  • Whitepapers
  • Press Releases
  • Market Reports
  • Events
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Copyright Valuemediaservices 2025 All rights reserved.