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HO scale buidings

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HO scale buidings
Posted by willy6 on Sunday, June 11, 2017 8:13 AM

I've been trying to find a HO scale rural brick and mortar U.S. Post Office kit or build up. I found a Plasticville and Vollemer one, but they were not brick and mortar. Any help will be appreciated, Thanks.

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Posted by RR_Mel on Sunday, June 11, 2017 9:03 AM

Have you considered scratch building or a kitbash?  There are a lot of supplies available for scratch building.  You could simply cover a Plasticville kit with a brick fascia, it’s available in either styrene or thick paper.
 
 
 
 
 
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Posted by DSchmitt on Sunday, June 11, 2017 9:20 AM

Don't limit your search to buildings labled "post office"  

There are lots of kits for brick buildings, many of which could be repurposed as a post office just by changing or adding signs. Some other minor modifications optional

https://www.walthers.com/search/category/products/layout/structures/scale/ho-scale/show/20?match=AND&q=brick%0D%0A

 

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, June 11, 2017 9:21 AM

I surely don't know a lot about USPO buildings.  My impression is that they usually lease existing structures.  I know of a local one that's lost its lease and the owner doesn't want to renew.

So I went to Walthers and entered "store" in their advance search.  First one up was this one:

 

https://www.walthers.com/country-store-kit-6-x-3-5-8-x-2-3-4-quot-15-2-x-9-2-x-6-9cm

 

It's free-standing and rural and brick.  Just leave out the gas pumps.

 

 

Ed

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Sunday, June 11, 2017 12:13 PM

This is the old Plasticville model:

I think I got it back in the Eisenhower administration.  It's a very small building that's tucked away in the back of my layout.  I would never have bought it for this layout,  but since I had it, I cleaned it up a bit and plopped it down.

What do you want the Post Office for?  Are you planning to make a full-fledged scene with customers, a loading dock and mail trucks, or is it just because you think your town needs a post office?  For a more involved model, I'd look at other kits and adapt them to be a post office.

Walthers has a Bachmann Plasticville School that might work.

My town had a nice old brick post office with a cupula, as I recall.  It was torn down to make more money for the shopping center's developers.  The post office got stuck in trailers for a couple of years, without even so much as a lobby for the customers, and it's now a non-descript store front between a dance studio and a lame Italian restaurant.  The mail carriers don't even work out of there anymore - they use space in the post office in the next town.

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Posted by BigDaddy on Sunday, June 11, 2017 12:20 PM

RR_Mel
Have you considered scratch building or a kitbash?

Google Image Search is your friend here.  There are many images of small town PO's in a variety of styles

https://www.google.com/search?q=small+town+post+office&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwinud_6pbbUAhXE6IMKHVfkDGAQ_AUICigB&biw=1366&bih=642

Here is but one that looks like an easy build.

Henry

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, June 11, 2017 12:50 PM

I would think that you could make a good argument for the Woodland Scenics First Bank Building serving as a U.S. Post Office building.

http://woodlandscenics.woodlandscenics.com/show/Item/12200/page/1

Rich

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Posted by ctyclsscs on Sunday, June 11, 2017 1:50 PM

Another would be this small kit if you could find one on eBay. Look at the Harford Building.

http://www.slmonline.com/shoppingcart/store.cgi?action=buildingsnew.htm&uid=29864

Jim

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Posted by tstage on Sunday, June 11, 2017 3:42 PM

For really nice brick 'n mortar buildings look at Design Preservation Models (DPM) kits.  Here's 8 pages worth from the Hobbylinc website.

FYI: Just be aware that you will need to sand the edges flat in order to get the walls to be flush with one another.  And they make very beautiful models when you are done with them.  Worth consideration...

Tom

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, June 11, 2017 4:10 PM

ctyclsscs

Aoother would be this small kit if you could find one on eBay. Look at the Harford Building.

http://www.slmonline.com/shoppingcart/store.cgi?action=buildingsnew.htm&uid=29864

Jim

 

Several of those SLM structures would seem suitable, but most of them are "temporarily out of production" which is too bad.

Rich

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, June 11, 2017 4:13 PM

tstage

For really nice brick 'n mortar buildings look at Design Preservation Models (DPM) kits.  Here's 8 pages worth from the Hobbylinc website.

Agreed.

I would consider First Bank as a reasonable possibility. 

Rich

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Posted by ctyclsscs on Sunday, June 11, 2017 4:19 PM

You'd be surprised, though, at how often SLM buildings show up on eBay. Of course, not much help if you need one right now.

Jim

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, June 11, 2017 4:36 PM

ctyclsscs

You'd be surprised, though, at how often SLM buildings show up on eBay. Of course, not much help if you need one right now.

Jim

 

Yep, the Redwood Street building would be perfect, and it is even lettered for the U.S. Post Office.

Rich

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, June 11, 2017 5:14 PM

The OP asked for a"rural" post office.

I guess the question might be HOW rural?

 

 

Ed

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, June 11, 2017 8:26 PM

7j43k

The OP asked for a"rural" post office.

I guess the question might be HOW rural?

 

 

Ed

 

Ahh, yes. But were rural post offices brick and mortar or simply wood frame?

Rich

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Sunday, June 11, 2017 9:40 PM

richhotrain
 
7j43k

The OP asked for a"rural" post office.

I guess the question might be HOW rural?

Ed

Ahh, yes. But were rural post offices brick and mortar or simply wood frame?

 

Rich

In sparsely-populated South Dakota, where the census had to count dogs and cats to reach 100 in a given zip code, the "Rural post office," was usually a lean-to addition to one end of the general store - and the storeowner's wife served as postmistress.  Such structures were never brick, but could have corrugated iron siding.

In larger settlements, not truly rural, the PO was usually a storefront, identical in architecture to the others on the block.

Rapid City, the only large concentration of population in the area, has a large, modern masonry structure - concrete columns, tilt-up curtain walls - for its Main Post Office.  The bottom 40% of the curtain walls are brick, with windows.  The top 60% is concrete and appears to have been poured with the columns.  Note that this is a BIG structure.  Uncompressed, the building and its parking areas would be about one tatami (3x6 feet) in HO scale.

The same Google search that allowed me to refresh my memory also came up with several very nice, reasonably small modern rural brick Post Office buildings.  Google Armour, SD, post office, and select images.  The Armour PO would be an easy scratchbuild.

I rather suspect that the small brick structures replaced wooden and wood-frame structures fairly recently, probably in an attempt to make the facilities fireproof.  At least one is tacked onto the end of a retail sales structure.

Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, June 11, 2017 11:05 PM

I think perhaps we should give it a break.  We've supplied lots of ideas.  Now we need to hear from Willy6 (the OP) to give us further guidance.  If any is needed.

 

Ed

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Posted by joe323 on Monday, June 12, 2017 6:24 AM

I use a non descript building with a mailbox in front.

Joe Staten Island West 

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Posted by dknelson on Monday, June 12, 2017 10:21 AM

The 1930s era brick post office in my home town looked a little like the Life Like "police station" kit that Walthers still offers.

https://www.walthers.com/products/layout/structures/woodlawn-police-station-kit-6-1-4-x-8-3-8-quot-15-9-x-21-3cm

Dave Nelson

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Posted by wdcrvr on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 8:41 AM
to 7j43k I do not understand why you would feel the need to throw a wet blanket on a good thread. I did not pose the question but certainly was enjoying the discussion. I do not recall see any guidelines as to how many responses are allowed before the OP is required to respond or give further details. It is fine to ask the OP for further information but I feel it is out of line to suggest to other members that they should stop responding. I guess I am a bit touchy on this type of comment because it happened to me. I posed a question that drew a lot of responses with a lot of people wanting to get into the discussion. No one asked me for additional details pertaining to my question, but at some point someone decided that they needed to say that people should quit providing further comments because I had not yet responded with a thank you for the info I had received so far. I was trying to take in all of the info I was receiving and I had not decided what I wanted to say about it as yet. I really enjoy and greatly value this forum, especially since I am not aware of any other modeler in my immediate area to talk to. But I did not appreciate getting burned by someone. Enough said.
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Posted by willy6 on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 8:41 AM

Thanks to everyone for the answers. I found a building that I can work with after a few modifications. It's the Walthers Modern Brick Santa Fe Station. The front and side loading docks looks close to my local PO. I'll remove the train platform and down size the building. Thanks again everyone.

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Posted by 7j43k on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 11:05 AM

wdcrvr
to 7j43k I do not understand why you would feel the need to throw a wet blanket on a good thread. I did not pose the question but certainly was enjoying the discussion. I do not recall see any guidelines as to how many responses are allowed before the OP is required to respond or give further details. It is fine to ask the OP for further information but I feel it is out of line to suggest to other members that they should stop responding. I guess I am a bit touchy on this type of comment because it happened to me. I posed a question that drew a lot of responses with a lot of people wanting to get into the discussion. No one asked me for additional details pertaining to my question, but at some point someone decided that they needed to say that people should quit providing further comments because I had not yet responded with a thank you for the info I had received so far. I was trying to take in all of the info I was receiving and I had not decided what I wanted to say about it as yet. I really enjoy and greatly value this forum, especially since I am not aware of any other modeler in my immediate area to talk to. But I did not appreciate getting burned by someone. Enough said.
 

The OP did not say he posted to start a discussion.  He asked for help.  Various people responded with suggestions.  Those suggestions were varied.  Clearly, the OP was seeking to install only one post office.  I threw on my wet blanket so as to get more information to help the OP.  By waiting for further information, perhaps WE ALL could home in on a better solution for the OP.

The point here is to help the OP.  Not to have a discussion.  That is NOT to say there is something wrong with having a 12 page discussion of variations of post office architecture throughout the world, but that was not what prompted the original post.

You say "No one asked me for additional details pertaining to my question...".  If you look at my post, you will see that that was pretty much what I was doing.  I was expressing the need for what I thought was further input from the OP.  To help answer his question.  Thus succeeding posts could be of more use than if they ramble around to who knows where.  Which, as I have said, is not necessarily bad--just not as helpful.  

You do touch on an interesting parallel subject:  I think those who originate a topic have a responsibility to it and to those people who take their time to respond.  I have seen people start a topic and NEVER show up again.  And I have seen people who start a topic and remain engaged in it.  I prefer to take part in the latter. 

I see that you bristle at being accused of not responding quickly enough with a thank-you.  Food for thought.  But I will remind you that we are taking our time, the time where we could be playing with trains or painting-the-shed, to respond to your request.  We don't HAVE to.

Please keep that in mind.

 

Ed

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Posted by 7j43k on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 11:10 AM

willy6

Thanks to everyone for the answers. I found a building that I can work with after a few modifications. It's the Walthers Modern Brick Santa Fe Station. The front and side loading docks looks close to my local PO. I'll remove the train platform and down size the building. Thanks again everyone.

 

You are welcome.

What an interesting pick!  I would never have thought of it.  It looks to me to be more of a "distribution center" than a rural post office.  That is, I don't see truckloads of mail showing up at the PO of greater Nowhere, Nevada. 

BUT.

I'm pretty sure there are local distribution centers.  And THAT building looks like an excellent candidate.

But you are saying you'll downsize it.  So perhaps it will lose that "distribution center" look.

I would certainly like to see the final result.

Excellent choice,

 

Ed

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Posted by last mountain & eastern hogger on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 11:15 AM

Whistling

Lets not forget that in small communities (Hamlet) lots of times the Post Office was just in a porch like setting in someones house.  Or a sideline business in another small business setting.

Johnboy out.......................

from Saskatchewan, in the Great White North.. 

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Posted by wdcrvr on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 12:56 PM

I did not say it was wrong to ask for more information from the OP.  I just did not feel that it was right to tell others to hold up on their replies.  I do apologize for the tone of my original post. It doen't look very kind in hindsight.  I appreciate all inputs on this forum.  Yours too.

Have a great day.

 

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Posted by willy6 on Wednesday, June 14, 2017 4:55 PM

Thanks again everyone, I have to finish my Walthers Interstate Fuel and Oil project and Walthers Betties Diner, then my PO project will begin.

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Posted by trainguy700 on Thursday, June 15, 2017 7:00 PM

What about the Smalltown USA structures?  I have never built one but I have heard that they are great strating points for projects like this.

 

As for DPM buildings, they are great models just a little trickey to paint because the doors/windows come molded into the plastic.

Let us know what you come up with it would be cool to see.

trainguy700

 

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