A 17,000-pound stainless-steel dinosaur handmade in the Fraser Valley is getting ready to head to its new home overlooking Okanagan Lake.
Metal sculptor Kevin Stone and his wife Michelle of Chilliwack were putting the finishing touches on a Tyrannosaurus rex they call Alice on Thursday (Sept. 14), buffing out heat marks from welds and polishing her to a shine.
āWeāve been doing the inside of the mouth and around the eyes making sure itās super clean and fresh looking,ā Kevin said. āWe want to have it all wiped down and clean before we ship it.ā
On Tuesday (Sept. 19) the Stones will be following behind the trailer that will haul it 325 kilometres from Chilliwack to Penticton.
Because the 50-foot long T. rex is too big and cannot travel down the highway in one piece, it will be shipped in three sections: the head and chest, the belly and hind legs, and the tail.

And although they have been working on it for more than two years, they still donāt even know what she looks like completely assembled.
Alice is so huge, the head and chest portion of her has always been separate from her belly and thick hind legs. Sheās so tall, she doesnāt fit in the Stonesā workshop in one piece.
āWeāre super excited to see it together because I donāt even know what she looks like,ā Kevin said. āItās stressful.ā
He admits heās already losing sleep over it.
Itāll take all day to move the dinosaur made out of mirror-polished, food-grade stainless steel. Theyāre starting around 7 a.m. on Sept. 19 where itāll be loaded onto a trailer. Kevin figures theyāll be in Penticton around lunchtime.
Once there, the belly/leg section will be bolted onto a 14-foot-by-14-foot concrete pad. Heāll then bolt on the tail to counterbalance the sculpture in order to put her head on.
āI hope it fits. I donāt know what to expect,ā Kevin said.
All of the bolts will be fastened inside the T. rex and once Kevinās done, heāll climb out a hatch located at the top.
When sheās completely installed, she will stand about 20 to 23 feet tall at the head.
āWeāre hoping it fits like a glove,ā Michelle added.

The man who commissioned it dreamed of owning a giant metal dinosaur since he was a kid, Kevin said. The buyer said it was a female T. rex, and so Kevin named her Alice after a dinosaur from a 1970s childrenās TV series called āLand of the Lostā that he watched when he was young.
Alice was purchased for $380,000 USD and even though itāll be installed on a private waterfront property, the public will still be able to see it without going on the property.
The massive T. rex will be on the east side of Okanagan Lake visible to anyone walking along the Kettle Valley Rail Trail. Itās less than a kilometre north of where the trail meets a residential street called Vancouver Place.
āIām really excited and Iām really happy that itās going to a public space in B.C.,ā Kevin said. āThis is probably one of the largest sculpture installations in Canada. Thereās only a handful of really big ones and this oneās up there.ā
Itās the only sculpture of his on display in Canada for the public to see. All of his other work is either outside the country or in private places in Canada not visible to the public.
It took 26 months to complete. Kevin hired two welders ā Josh Guretzki and Brandon OāShea ā who also did a huge amount of labour.
āThey worked hard on it,ā Kevin said.
The Chilliwack metal sculptor always has more than one project on the go.
Over the past two years, he has finished a number of other pieces including a , and a that was part of a larger and very strange rocket/goat-themed sculpture for a cryptocurrency company.
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During the time they were building the T. rex, they encountered issues.
They realized part of it didnāt look right so they re-engineered the entire belly, making it lower by a few feet.
And for several months, they didnāt even know where the T. rex was going to be heading ā the owner changed his mind at one point with plans to have it shipped to his other home on the Cayman Islands. It was confirmed only about three months ago that it would be staying in B.C.
But the biggest challenge was the workshop space.
āNot having the correct space to be able to assemble it properly and stand back and look at itā was the most complicated part of the build, Kevin said.
Now on Sept. 19, Kevin will finally be able to do exactly that. Seeing Alice complete for the first time ever will be an early birthday present for the metal sculptor whose birthday falls on Sept. 20.
āI canāt wait to see it,ā Michelle said. āTo actually stand back and see it together is going to be amazing.ā
