Reading the post on the Mishasaka store closing, (pictured below) the store peaked my curosity.
I spent 12 years working as a architect, for national retail stores and restaurants before starting my career as a stay-at-home dad. In retail, product quantity, and selection were the rule, at the expense of store design.
So where would you shop for trains?
A: Extensive train layout with a limited stock, probably have to order what you were looking for.
B: Extensive selection with boxes to the roof? It's in there, somewhere.
C: Wherever is cheapest? (Online included.)
D: Wherever is closest?
Does a test area matter?
Thanks,
Kurt
Store layouts are not a draw to me. A simple test loop would be, though. A clean, organized shop with good service is also preferred.
Jim
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
jaabat wrote: Store layouts are not a draw to me. A simple test loop would be, though. A clean, organized shop with good service is also preferred. Jim
READ ON ONLY IF YOU HAVE TIME On the other hand:
On my travels, I have visited a few retail stores where the owners have no idea of what they have, have never heard of or seen a dust cloth and, if you were to really look around, you could find an older boxed item that they will sell to you at the original listed price. (These are few and far between but, when found, are a real treasures)
A few years back, I came upon such a store in West Virginia. When I made a selection and questioned the price marketed on the box, the owner asked if I thought it was too high and that he would take a few dollars off. It turned out that he was retired, had received the bulk of the merchandise from his late uncle's estate and only opened the shop when he wasn't "fishin".
PS I paid the old 'listed' price (half the then current price for the same item) because if I took him up on his offer I wouldn't have been counting 'box cars' to fall asleep that night, I would have been tossing and turning all night to avoid them.
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