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Monday, June 23, 2014

Union Pacific Passenger Station at Logan Utah

Logan Utah Railroad Depot Shows 19th Century Character

Passenger Train Station Fits Range of Railroad Eras

From Steam to Modern Diesel Model Railroad Layouts

Free Model Railroad Plans, Depot, Passenger, Union Pacific, Utah, Logan
Union Pacific Railroad Depot, Logan, Utah
The Union Pacific Railroad Logan, Utah, passenger station was built shortly before the turn of the century, during that lines’s short ownership by Oregon Short Line. 
A typical 19th Century railroad depot, the Logan station had some attractive details.  hip roof covered 178 feet of platform. The symmetrical floor plan was split by the telegrapher’s bay, featuring ticket windows in each of the waiting rooms.
A timeless classic perfect for any model railroad layout based from the end of the 19th Century to the modern era, the small size of the building would fit well as a smaller town station, and the long platform could be selectively compressed if need be to fit a smaller space.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Building Benchwork for our O Gauge Model Railroad Layout in a Spare Bedroom Project

Modular Benchwork for an O Gauge Model Railroad Layout

Nothing lasts forever so plan for your model railroad future

When building benchwork for your current model railroad layout

Free model railroad plans, O gauge, layout, benchwork
Modular tables for an O Gauge model railroad layout
After settling on the location – a spare bedroom – for our O Gauge model railroad layout on our first page, and deciding how much room we had in the bedroom on our second page, we need to get busy designing the layout’s benchwork and trackwork.
The benchwork (the tables on which the tracks are fastened) is somewhat dependent on the trackwork (how the model railroad tracks are routed around the tables), and vice-versa. There are many methods of constructing benchwork from the basic 4×8-foot sheet of plywood on sawhorses for a transient layout, to building right into the structure of the room’s walls.
We went with a modular design that is semi-permanent model railroad layout, but also can be disassembled and moved if our needs for space change. Let's face it: people buy new houses and move, or interests change. If you don't take this into account, when the day comes that you have to tear down your model railroad layout, there won't be much to salvage. With this design, if you are no longer interested, you can sell the layout to someone else, or if you have to move, your model railroad layout can move with you.