My top three in no particular order:
1. John Allen's Gorre and Daphetid.
2. Allen McClelland's Virginian and Ohio.
3. George Selios' Franklin and South Manchester.
There's lots of other great ones, but these are the three I would have most liked to have seen. Sadly, only one is left.
My landmark layouts:
Portage Hill & Communipaw (MR/Model Trains project layout, 1962-1963): introduced concept of modeling turn of the century to me. The PH&C also introduced significantly changing the layout as time went on - both expansion of a 4x8 and changing to a point-to-point. The series emphasized just trying things and seeing how they worked.
Ben King's Timber City (I forget full name of layout): introduced building scenery before track to me.
John Allen's Gorre & Daphitid: introduced prototypical operations (again to me), and an over-arching theme and reason for being for the layout.
Bear Creek & Jackson, Pete Solleberg (grade up towards Emigrant and Donner Passes): both layouts introduced very realistic scenery that matched my memories and photos of the areas modeled
Fred W
My Uncle George Pearson who had a sizable HO layout in his garage and workshop as I was growing up. Huge yard with a long run through cieling high scenery into the attick staging area.
John Allen's GD Lines for dramatic scenery, structures, cars, bridges, etc... could go on more.
Whit Towers Aturas & Lone Pine for many reasons. Mainly I was able to operate the layout with him in the '90's before his passing. The yards were a blast to run and well designed. The industrial switching areas were challenging. Mostly we almost always had some laughable moments when someone thought they could beat the system and end up fowling the main or worse.
There are others for but these are the big ones for me.
John
I have a follow-on question-
Are there layout modeling styles (other than your own or your best buddy's) that have become "deeply ingrained" in the back of your mind such that when you see a photo someplace you instantly recognize the modeler or the layout?
George Sellios is like that for me, for example, his Franklin & South Manchester is absolutely iconic, IMO of course. So is Allen McClellan's V&O, Tony Koester's Allegeny Midland, John Allen's Gorre & Daphetid, and a number of others.
being especially fond of scenery and scenic details, there are about 20 or so famous layouts that have proved their inspiration to me over and over but I suppose my top three would be....
3.) John Allen's G&D
2.) George Sellios' F&SM
1.) All time fave(s): The late British modeller Paul Templar's various narrow gauge layouts especially the Badger Creek Lumber Company http://www.badger-creek.co.uk/
Always wondered to myself why I never got into narrow gauge!
Matt
Yahh Mark, I forgot about Harry Brunks project. I even bought his book. There's so many great layouts out there and the different themes make it hard to choose one. I don't eat chocalate truffles 'cause I can't make up my mind which to try.
Lets see my favorites in layouts are.
Tony Koesters old A&M and his New NKP Frankfort Division.
Bill Darnabys The Maumee Route
John Depauw's EJE
Allen McClellands V&O
Larrys Clinch Valley
Tom Johnsons InRail Shortline
Andy Keeneys The Nashville Road
Matt Lappins "Old" CIOR and the "New " C&O Indiana Division
Kevin
PA&ERR* My copy of The V&O Story (which I bought new!) is well worn and filled with notes and in a couple of places the binding is broken and I've had to use tape to hold the pages in place! -George
-George
I have that problem too. I thought I found a solution for it once-- I bought a second copy. But now that one is in the same shape too :)
markpierceHow could you guys leave out Jack Burgess's Yosemite Valley Railroad or Harry Brunk's Clear Creek Division of the Colorado & Southern. Those layouts make one feel he is in the central California Sierra foothills and the Colorado Rocky Mountains and on the right-of-way of the respective railroads. Mark
How could you guys leave out Jack Burgess's Yosemite Valley Railroad or Harry Brunk's Clear Creek Division of the Colorado & Southern. Those layouts make one feel he is in the central California Sierra foothills and the Colorado Rocky Mountains and on the right-of-way of the respective railroads.
Mark
I think landmark layouts bring a change in the hobby or are a significant example that causes others to follow or change. I never heard of Harry Brunk's Clear Creek Division of the Colorado & Southern so it's not a landmark for me and while I have heard of, seen pictures of Jack Burgess's Yosemite Valley Railroad it doesn't serve as landmark for me. That is not to say that these layouts aren't very good, outstanding even, just not a landmark.
Enjoy
Paul
In no particular order
John DePauw's EJ&E - shows what can be done with operations
Allen McClelland's V&O - awesome
Tony Koester's AM - enjoyed following it over the years
Mike Ritchdorf's N&W - a ball to operate
David Barrow's CM&SF - introduction for me to walk around
Larry
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wH_w5Hi5mYo
http://www.youtube.com/user/ClinchValleySD40
http://www.flickr.com/photos/52481330@N05/
http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/page/1/ppuser/8745/sl/c
In no particular order...
1 Eric Boorman's Utah Belt
2 John Allen's Gorre and Daphetid
3 Allen McClelland's Virgina and Ohio*
4 Tony Koester's Alleghany Midland
5 Lee Nicholas' Utah Colorado Western
* My copy of The V&O Story (which I bought new!) is well worn and filled with notes and in a couple of places the binding is broken and I've had to use tape to hold the pages in place!
"And the sons of Pullman porters and the sons of engineers ride their father's magic carpet made of steel..."
I like any well themed layouts but Thatchers Inlet has got to be one of my all time favs. While not much of a narrow gauge fan I love the waterside theme of this layout. Having lived in a harbor town for twenty eight years(Sitka,Alaska) and now Lewiston the idea of rail to ship traffic really catches my imagination. BILL
My most memorial layout was one being created by a member of this forum. It was a mountainous setting in the West. It was a point to point with the town of A Rock at one end and the town of Hard Place at the other. In the middle was a “whistle stop” called Between.
I was was new to the forum and just beginning my layout when he was building this layout. For some reason it grabbed my imagination from the beginning and I still remember it and probably always will.
After some time passed with out seeing any further postings I learned that he had serious health problems. and was unable to complete it.
Now I surmise the modler knew his health condition and named it after his situation, beteen a rock and a hard place.
He’s gone but not forgotten.
Bob
Don't Ever Give Up
I'll split mine into two categories. Those that I only read about or saw videos of and those that I have actually been to.
Those I have not been to:
As I live pretty close to Harold and Tony maybe someday I'll get to see these layouts and switch them to my viewed list
Actually been to:
These come to mind. As I suspect for many, these all appeared in the hobby press about the time I started the hobby.
1. East Broad Top trackplan in the December 1971 issue. I know it wasn't built, but it's a beautiful trackplan.
2. Canadiagua Southern, linear walkaround design.
3. Gorre and Daphtid for the scenery.
4. Sunset Valley for operations.
5. Thatcher's Inlet for 2 ft narrow gauge (in HOn30).
Difficult for me to say, and the ones I like I certainly wouldn't rate numerically, because I feel that they all have things to contribute to the hobby.
Being primarily interested in layouts set in the West (especially the 'mountain' west), two that come to mind are John Allen's classic "Gorre & Daphetid", and Joe Fugate's Siskiyou Lines. Allen was completely unafraid of winding his railroad around spectacular scenery, and Fugate continues to amaze me with the amount of detail as he sceinics his own line. Two very innovative railroads, IMO.
I always liked Allen McClellands V&O for its eastern Appalachian 'feel'--those heavy coal trains in his lush, rugged eastern scenery.
I'd say that for my own Yuba River Sub, my major inspiration--both consciously and unconsciously--has probably been Allen's G&D. Not because of his almost radical innovation, but primarily for the way his layout looked as if the scenery came FIRST and he wrapped the layout around the mountains accordingly. That's the effect I'm trying to achieve--the railroad came way AFTER the mountains were formed.
Tom
Tom View my layout photos! http://s299.photobucket.com/albums/mm310/TWhite-014/Rio%20Grande%20Yuba%20River%20Sub One can NEVER have too many Articulateds!
Being older, mine predate those:
Gorre and Daphetid by John Allen (innovation to the max)
Virginian & Ohio by Allan McClelland (walk around, electronics, scope)
Anything by John Olson ("en"?) Mescal Lines, Jerone and Southwestern (scenery)
I don't remember the name of the line - Timber Railroad by Bob Brown (details and theme)
A whole bunch of railroads are in 5th place.
Paulus Jas 4) Urban feel on a shelf: Kingsbury branch in Chicago by ????????
4) Urban feel on a shelf: Kingsbury branch in Chicago by ????????
That would be Bill Denton's N scale sectional layout. I wrote a bit about Bill's layout and others I have found inspiring in my blog.
Layout Design GalleryLayout Design Special Interest Group
mine too!!!!!!
hi,
We are all different, so I suppose every one must have his own other landmark layouts. And in different category's. Let say: Design, Scenery, Overall, Technics Electronics or whatever. Important is why you are feeling that a specific RR is the number one for you.
My top five are (the order has no importance at all)
1) for innovative design (walk along): C&S by John Armstrong
2) rural design and the less is beautifull approach for the very first time: SJ&SF by Andy Sperandeo.
3) suburban feel and less is beautifull: Miami South by Lance Mindheim.
4) Urban feel on a shelf: Kingsbury branch in Chicago by Bill Denton
5) For showing off railroading in the dark: The Maumee Route by Bill Darneby.
Make your own list and share it, please