Omineca

Omineca Built on Commitment

Full-scope industrial contractor based in Prince George.

Fabrication, installation, shutdown support, and 24/7 emergency response across Canada and North America.

We install, maintain, and repair industrial equipment across Canada and the US.⠀Sawmills, pulp and paper facilities, min...
06/02/2026

We install, maintain, and repair industrial equipment across Canada and the US.

Sawmills, pulp and paper facilities, mining operations. Structural steel, conveyance systems, full mechanical scope from fabrication through commissioning.

If something breaks at 2am, we have in-house trades and machining to get it back running. If you're planning a greenfield build or a major installation, we'll be there from the first lift to the last bolt.

One crew. One contract. One point of accountability.
If you have a project coming up, send us a message.

This is the crew on site.⠀Millwrights, welders, pipefitters. Different trades, one job. The structure and equipment behi...
05/28/2026

This is the crew on site.

Millwrights, welders, pipefitters. Different trades, one job. The structure and equipment behind them is what they came here to build.
That's the job. You show up, you figure it out, and you stay until it runs.

This is what the site looks like when the work is nearly done.⠀Structural steel up, building envelope going on, conveyan...
05/27/2026

This is what the site looks like when the work is nearly done.

Structural steel up, building envelope going on, conveyance system in place. The crew is still on site in this photo, still working.

Most of what it takes to get here doesn't look particularly interesting from the outside. It's just people showing up every day and doing the work until it's done.

05/20/2026

At the end of every project, the crew does a QC walkthrough.

Not a formality. Not a box to check. Someone actually walks the line, looks for deficiencies, runs a wire to make sure everything is aligned before anyone calls it done.

It's a small thing that most people never see. But it's the difference between handing over a job and handing over a job you'd put your name on.

If you want a contractor who checks before they walk away, reach out.

They'd just finished installing this section.⠀The crew had been up there most of the day, working through the bolting se...
05/09/2026

They'd just finished installing this section.

The crew had been up there most of the day, working through the bolting sequence on a structural steel frame. By the time they were done, it was worth documenting.

Hard to argue with that view.

Took this photo from the top of the conveyor at the end of a long day.⠀The structure behind it went up the same week. We...
05/06/2026

Took this photo from the top of the conveyor at the end of a long day.

The structure behind it went up the same week. We installed it on site, same crew that was there from the first lift to the last bolt.

The sky was a bonus.

Field welding looks different from shop welding.⠀No controlled environment, no fixed workstation. The conditions change ...
05/04/2026

Field welding looks different from shop welding.

No controlled environment, no fixed workstation. The conditions change depending on the site, the weather, and what the job throws at you that day. The welder adjusts.

This is a fl**ge weld on an active industrial site. The fit-up has to be right before the arc starts, because once the weld is in, it's in. There's no easy way back.

That's what the work actually looks like.

Some jobs start before sunrise.⠀This one did. The crew was already on site when this photo was taken.⠀A lot of what we d...
04/28/2026

Some jobs start before sunrise.

This one did. The crew was already on site when this photo was taken.

A lot of what we do happens at hours like this, on sites that look like this, with nobody watching except the people doing the work.

That's just what the job looks like

There's a cost on most industrial projects that doesn't show up in the budget. It shows up in your calendar.⠀You know th...
04/23/2026

There's a cost on most industrial projects that doesn't show up in the budget. It shows up in your calendar.

You know the one. The call where the fabricator says the dimensions are right, the install crew says they're not, the engineer points to a footnote in the drawings, and an hour later you're still on the phone not fixing anything, just figuring out who's supposed to call whom next.

That gap between contractors is where projects quietly fall apart.

The cost is real, just hard to see: your maintenance lead spending a week mediating instead of running the facility. A shutdown that went two days over because nobody owned the handoff between phases. A change order that arrived three weeks after completion with no contractual ground to push back on.

None of that shows up on anyone's invoice. But it was absolutely a cost.

It keeps happening for a structural reason. Five contractors on a project means five scopes and nobody responsible for what falls between them. That's where the problems live.

When one contractor owns the whole scope, the gap disappears. Not because the problems go away, but because there's nowhere for them to hide.

Address

287 Ongman Road
Prince George, BC
V2K4K9

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 4pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 4pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 4pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4pm
Friday 8:30am - 4pm

Telephone

250-562-6769

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