Guys my next building project is a hotel and I need some pictures/ideas of what worked for you. My era is late 1920's to early 30's. The theme is an established western small town supporting logging, gold mining, and ranching. I have a firestation, several two story main street/general store type buildings, a depot, a church with stained glass windows, and a grist mill that I'm converting into an ice plant/power station all bordering a central park. The smaller buildings include a gas station, post office, and a small resturant. The final two buildings will be the grand hotel and then a fair size school with a baseball field. I've been building from Garden-Texture plans and splitting my own roof shingles so I'm probably going to end up building the grand hotel to be compatible with this style. Here are a couple pictures of some of my buildings and the newly started town -
I plan on scratch building the grand hotel but I really need some ideas. Thanks for all your help in advance.
Rex.
Rex:
Here is a pic of mine. It is a three-story kit from Piko that I shortened by one floor.
Here are a couple of 1:24 structures at the Fallbrook Museum. These are all models of real buildings that existed in Fallbrook CA.
Naples (Ellis) Hotel 1887-1958,
Fallbrook Hotel 1885-1912
Hope you get a "vision" from one of these.
Tom Trigg
google smith pond junction there hotel looks pretty good.
Tom,
My Chief of Staff like the naples hotel. She also sent me a picture of the Macinaw Island hotel. Both are a little large for my town. The fallbrook hotel is about the right size but not "grand" enough. Some great idea though so it gets me started.
Thanks,
Rex
Trent,
I purchased a couple sets of plans from Smith Pond Junction. Their hotel looks nice. The only problem I've had is their construction is on the light side. The gas station/garage I built tends to take off in a light wind. I think they work better indoors. Just my opinion. Thanks for the mention though. I'm going to relook their plan for some ideas.
Get the Garden Railways newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month