Val Jalbert consisted of the pulp mill and houses for the workers which were located in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec, Canada at the Ouiatchouan Falls near the current town of Chambord.
The mill and associated town were built in 1901 and it became a ghost town when the mill closed in 1927. The reason for the closure was that the mill produced mechanically processed pulp, which had been in demand in Europe and the US for this material was replaced by chemically processed pulp, something the mill could not produce.
The "town" was a typical "company town" built to attract and keep skilled workers. The houses had running water, indoor plumbing and electricity, luxuries that were unheard of in other places.
The day we were there, it rained hard all day, so shooting and then post-processing to get some texture in the sky was challenging.
1. The Pulp Mill and the Ouiatchouan Falls
2. The Convent and school - four nuns and a Mother Superior lived, worked and taught the local children
3. Street with worker's houses.
4. Mill Worker's House