A few of years ago I decided I wanted buildings on my garden railroad, the OSP&C, to be modeled after local buildings. I do not run the trains in the winter, so I try to make a building during the “off season”.
This was the building from the 2004/05 winter. (First time posting pictures, hope it works.)
Here are two pictures of the real church so you can see what I was trying for.
[bow] Well Done [tup][tup][tup] From what I can see, about the only thing missing are the shrub bushes at the front corners. Execelently well done. Hope to see a few “under construction” photos.
Hi OSP&C
That is one large model and well done I might add.
Those of us with smaller towns will just have too look for interesting smaller houses of worship that fit in with the town.
regards John
John Busby
I took time to measure and scale the original but when it came time to move outdoors from the workshop ---- whew! I think the building for this winter’s build will have some liberties taken with the final size.
Hi ***
Could always make the post office I dont mean one of those huge city jobs.
Give it a wild west look and make it 8’6" across the front and 29’ deep with a veranda thats 8’ deep and has a false front saw something similar somewhere
or perhapes a general store thats 10’ square
Must be heaps of possabilaties around the place that dont need selective compression…
regards John
vbsltco
The church has a 2x2 pressure treated “foundation” where it will rest on the bluestone. The basic structure is then constructed with 1 x 6 cedar that I planed to 1/2" and then edge glued. Over the cedar I glued dollhouse lap siding. The trim is a combination of wood scraps, mostly cedar, augmented by some dollhouse moldings.
***,
Excellent modelling. How about some details on construction? What did you ude for walls etc?
This is a small church I built out of Korflute a few years back. It uses Precision Products windows