Sunday, December 19, 2021

Adding a Bookbindery

 Back in 2014 I had shared images of what used to be a bindery located in an arcade under the Railroad and S[tadt]-Bahn tracks in Berlin. They weren't beautiful brick or stone arcades, but brutalist concrete on what is a kind of island between busy streets.

Yesterday, while surfing Google Maps I found that they had updated the images in that area, this time with an S-Bahn train overhead.

Buchbinderei near to Jannowitzbrücke, Berlin.

I think I will interpret that idea on my layout but opening a bindery in the lot below to the right of the gate and going back at an angle. The pigeon shack and BMW 2002s will need to be relocated...

The lot for the new bindery.

The facade of the bindery I apprenticed in Gelsenkirchen could also easily be adapted to the lot, and I have views that I can use to create the interior details regardless the facade. Rather than running on top of the bindery, the mainline runs above.

Bindery I apprenticed in 1985-87.

Should be a fun and relatively easy project to distract me from the main project of redoing the Bw and finishing the Schrebergärten next to Posten 210...



Saturday, December 11, 2021

Cab Ride Around Papphausen

 A first cab ride around Papphausen / Führerstandsmitfahrt rund um Papphausen in both directions. Note, speeds not always prototypical for a BR94. So, pretend it's whatever engine runs at that speed. ;-)


Camera (cheap "spycam" off of Amazon). Close focus not great, interface and instructions ok, but lots of fun to watch.


Sunday, November 21, 2021

An afternoon at the Hauptbahnhof and elsewhere around Papphausen

 Another afternoon running trains on the layout with views of the Hauptbahnhof, through it actually, and some other vantage points.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Papphausen Layout Update

Papphausen has been tote Hose for years now, really, but after a very busy summer and early fall, I decided to take a break from the bookbinding and related writing and service commitments to instead decompress with some training. Long neglected, the trains were in need of a deep dusting and cleaning, and most of all just wanted to be run again. In need of some right-sized help, I asked Fritz Otto, and he agreed, getting in on the fun. In some respects, it was a very "meta" experience. There are a lot of bookbinding skills applied throughout the layout, particularly box making, as most of the structures are made of card, some kits, but most built from scratch using photos as a basis with photo-realistic pattern sheets, so we all felt at home.

Repositioning figures in front of the Bude, Trinkhalle, or Kiosk
as it is also called. The one hidden behind Fritz Otto's arm is
a few doors down the street from where my grandparents lived in Duisburg.


Just a quick DR commuter train run-by while dusting.

A DR 118 (the Reichsbahn equivalent to the DB's V200/220/221) next to my vintage tin-plate TEE
with the S-Bahn above.

Another view of the S-Bahn pulled by a 111.

A classic E10 express engine with a D-Zug of mixed rolling stock.

Fritz Otto surveying Pappeck in search of cobwebs and dust monsters.


Been experimenting with the GoPro and some different vantage points. 
Need to get better with the editing. I also use the GoPro like CTV on my phone
for the far end of my switching yard. I can actually now see where the engine... is in
relation to the uncoupler tracks. Game changing.


These past few weekends have been very enjoyable, I've been finding a nice balance between the bookbinding and the trains, and am getting ready to work on some scenes and structures in need of updating...