Buchans Junction is a
local service district and
designated place in the
Canadian province of
Newfoundland and Labrador in the central part of the island of
Newfoundland. It is on the banks of Mary March River near where the Mary March River flows into the northeast end of
Beothuk Lake. The community is on a site first known as "Four Mile Siding" on the railway which was constructed in 1900 to connect the community of Millertown to the Newfoundland Railway at Millertown Junction. The site itself became a rail junction in 1927 when
Asarco subsidiary, the Buchans Mining Company, completed a rail link from the newly formed mining town of
Buchans. Ever since 1927, even after the Buchans Railway closed in 1977, the community has been known as "Buchans Junction".
The town is located approximately 42 kilometres southwest of the
Trans-Canada Highway on
Route 370. According to
Statistics Canada, it had a population of 79 in 2011, with 45 private dwellings.
As a designated place in the
2016 Census of Population conducted by
Statistics Canada, Buchans Junction recorded a population of 72 living in 38 of its 54 total private dwellings, a change of -8.9% from its 2011 population of 79. With a land area of 8.07 km2 (3.12 sq mi), it had a population density of 8.9/km2 (23.1/sq mi) in 2016.[2]
Government
Buchans Junction is a local service district (LSD)[3] that is governed by a committee responsible for the provision of certain services to the community.[4]