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Pappendeckel buildings – something new...


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The new Factory now has rusted roofs, the innocent yellow rendering lightly sooted and a bit greenery:

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Customs Office – new

 

The Customs Office with its light grey rendered surface didn’t quite satisfy me. I wanted some variation. So I started anew with a brick structure – looking a bit US.

 

Pictures say more than words:

 

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Complete with its flat tarpaper roof and some details:

 

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Aahhh… those photographic images! They tell us what all went wrong and has to be corrected. Quite a lot… and: needs to be integrated in the ground cover soon.

 

 

Always grateful for comments.

 

   Armin

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  • 2 weeks later...

To add to the variety I got with the New Customs Office I rather quickly made another Warehouse; it got an annex of corrugated iron and a broad ramp:

 

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These together make a nice ensemble, me thinks:
 

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Now just one small building missing: quite in the foreground right to conceal the exit to the fiddle stick.

 

I will keep you posted…

 

  Armin

 

 

PS: this whiteish window does stand out like a sore thumb – replace? What do you think?

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 months later...

Port Authority

 

Even a very little access point for ferries like Port Chambre needs some order and therefo­re should have a building for one (or two) officers overlooking things and happenings and telling people what to do (and what not).

 

A few weeks ago I downloaded (and paid for) a kit to make a rotten US warehouse (I will not name the manufacturer, ‘cause this stuff is just a shame and not even a single Cent worth). After I had printed the thing I decided it could end its life as tem­plate for a view block at the right side of my layout: said Office for the Port Authority.

Its outline is trapezoidal, it will fit nicely in the digon behind the r/h point. Brick papered, as usual. I imagine a tower on top to overlook the quay.

 

Cardboard covered with template, cut and bodged together:

 

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Covered with brick paper and with a mock up of the tower:

 

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Very provisional this…

 

Until next time…

   Armin

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  • 1 month later...

Indeed it was just a mock up, no more. Ugly colour and a silly step in the roof.

 

Made it anew with more decent brick paper, attached an officer at its desk:

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Then there came the roof behind the tower (glazing not yet fixed):

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Better now:
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Ready to plonk:
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A few details missing…

 

Enjoy

  Armin

 

 

 

edit: true brick colour is best represented by the two last pics.

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  • 3 months later...

Again time to add a bit to this thread, me thinks…

 

Some time ago I came across a website presenting a small, disused, but very nice station buil­ding (klick me – goto “Foto-Galerie”). Its name is Deinste, it’s located in northern Ger­many and these days preser­ved by a gang of shortline aficionados.

 

This structure is a composite of the Empfangsgebäude (public area and office), the Stell­werk (sig­nal box) and the Güterschuppen (goods shed) – all connected. Obviously the various ele­ments are of differing age. Thus the main building is clad with wooden planks, the sig­nal box (partly embracing the office) is bricks and the goods shed timber framed bricks.

 

I thought this might be an interesting little project, aside from the small layouts I’m bodging together. I already had a new layout in mind, which, however, I’ve hibernated for the time being. Nevertheless I did a start – however, not slavishly following the proto­type…

 

 

Not too many words – let them pictures speak for themselves (the methods used are already known to you loyal readers):

Front view (ca. 1910) used as template:

 

 

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Outlines to make the base layers:

 

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Paper mock up: ...   :O  ...   :O  ...   :O 

 

Sorry, upload of further pics failed - will revert later... 

System says: Error: This file was too big to upload

My answer  : no, it is with 266KB well under the limit!

 

  Armin

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Thanks, Edwardian, its appreciated.

 

 

Now I try to continue with the upload(s) which yesterday failed...

 

 

First a paper mock up:

 

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Then the card cut out:

 

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First windows inserted (mullions are white sewing threads stiffened with PVA)

 

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all card pieces glued together - not yet assembled:

 

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Now cladding ( .8mm basswood – textured by manufacturer):

 

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It seems I’ve the Transform function in GIMP not yet fully understood…

 

 

This is what you call the signal box – here with corrugated sheet waiting for the glue to set:

 

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The goods shed – like the signal box not closely following the original:

 

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Same from underside:

 

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At last all parts together:

 

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A nice ensemble, me thinks...

 

That's it for now - other structures to follow...

 

Regards

  Armin

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Cursed with a need to share the occasional insights I experience, I offer the view that part of the appeal of these models is the medium in which they are executed.  Most HO European layouts that one typically sees reflect the relative maturity of that market in displaying the vast array of plastic building kits and accessories available to it.  Wonderful as Pola-Faller land is, I am just not used to seeing such subjects rendered in card and so, when I do, it is refreshing and provides a new perspective on the subject.

 

Now I have to see my doctor, because I suspect I need to cut the dosage of my pretentiousness pills.   

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Thank you all for your attention. 

 

Edwardian: I don't see anything pretentious -

it's just a matter of taste or preference, in my opinion.

But you relate to my personal habit of using RMWeb

instead of German RR fora. I'm not so fond (to say the 

least) of those timber framed plastic buildings

with their deep mortar joints.

And as a dyed-in-the-wool individualist I chose card and

wood etc. And design my own elevations at the PC.

 

Regards

   Armin

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