After reading another thread that I found really inspiring and got my mind going I thought I would start another as I do not want to hijack the other thread.
Mark I do hope you post more as I would like to add this scene to my own layout. It would be great hidden in the woods in a corner or to only be seen from outside throw the window in my train room. I've had that idea for years and it has been hiding in the recesses of my mind. Maybe a single street light on a back road some where just to light the scene up when running trains at night.
When I was growing up you could find scenes like that all over the south. Just a few years ago while driving on a back road, I spotted an old liquor store at a cross roads in the middle of no where. A "huge" little brown jug, type of structure about 20 feet round and 25 feet tall. It was outrages to see it just setting there like that with the weeds growing up around it. I thought to myself "That giant is going to miss that jug soon". Must have been a 40,000 gallon jug. Now I wish I would have had the time and a camera to get just one picture of it.
Come to think of it there are a lot of odd structures that were built in the 50's, 60's and 70's as the highway's of the US where getting better and more and more places had to get the travelers to stop as they went driving by. A huge elephant some where out west comes to mind and the huge guy holding tires.
Were cooking with steam now.
What odd and interesting structures do you remember or have seen?
Johnnny_reb Once a word is spoken it can not be unspoken!
My Train Page My Photobucket Page My YouTube Channel
Oh, I really kick myself for this one.
In Denver they built a new high-ocupancy vehicle lane next to and by-passing the Park Avenue viaduct. It went right over and beside the old "Denver Boiler Company". In the back yard of this building was a wonderful sort of junk yard where the boiler company had been throwing stuff for years and years. The center piece was a 1948 or so 2 ton truck. It was great. I kept meaning to get a picture of it.
Well, about two years ago they went in and cleaned it all up. Nothing but scrubby weeds and a chain link fence with barb wire on the top around it now. Drat!
They are also building a new part of an oil refinery over an old railroad oil loading doc in Commerce City. I had meant for years to get photos of that too..... double drat.
Johnnny_reb wrote: Come to think of it there are a lot of odd structures that were built in the 50's, 60's and 70's as the highway's of the US where getting better and more and more places had to get the travelers to stop as they went driving by. A huge elephant some where out west comes to mind and the huge guy holding tires.
You may be thinking of "Lucy". She's at the Jersey shore. Dont for get the hotdog and donut shaped eateries - The Brown Derby in Hwood, Oscar Meyer Hotdog stands & truck - etc., etc. My
In Weeky Watchey(SP?) Florida, I remember an old gas station. (Sinclair?) The building itself was actually shaped like a huge dinosaur.
Something of interest that's really cool to see is a rotary coal car dumper at a power plant. I remember seeing one as a kid and being amazed by it. I sat and watched it for hours.
loathar wrote: In Weeky Watchey(SP?) Florida, I remember an old gas station. (Sinclair?) The building itself was actually shaped like a huge dinosaur.Something of interest that's really cool to see is a rotary coal car dumper at a power plant. I remember seeing one as a kid and being amazed by it. I sat and watched it for hours.
It's Harold's Auto Center, Hwy 19, actually located in Spring Hill, FL, near Weeki Wachee.
Rotor
Jake: How often does the train go by? Elwood: So often you won't even notice ...
lvanhen wrote: Johnnny_reb wrote: Come to think of it there are a lot of odd structures that were built in the 50's, 60's and 70's as the highway's of the US where getting better and more and more places had to get the travelers to stop as they went driving by. A huge elephant some where out west comes to mind and the huge guy holding tires. You may be thinking of "Lucy". She's at the Jersey shore. Dont for get the hotdog and donut shaped eateries - The Brown Derby in Hwood, Oscar Meyer Hotdog stands & truck - etc., etc. My
Lucy is not the only oversized roadside pachyderm...
This is near I90/I94:
This one is in Illinois at an antique shop:
Near Seattle:
Pre WWII, there was a franchise gas station chain, Tancar (or Tankar) Stations, that had a standard railroad tank car with the center (except for the dome) cut out and a concrete block office about 8 feet wide inserted there. If there was space behind the car, the concrete block structure took on a T shape, with storage for lube oil and supplies to the rear The pump island was in the usual place. I believe the actual storage tanks for gasoline were below ground.
One of the model railroad mags had a how to build this article - about half a century ago.
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Although not a structure, during a very recent trip I found that the interstate at Gillette Wyoming had a coal fired power plant on one side and a coal mine on the other. Make a good scene, replace the I-State with your railroad of choice.
The dinosaur at Wall Drug, SD, not to mention the Jackelope inside.
Jack W
Although not a building, this is an Oregon roadside creature.
http://vintageroadtrip.blogspot.com/2007/08/vintage-roadside-meets-real-beast-of.html
In the early '90s I used to paint lines on Oregon roads so I traveled to a lot of obscure nooks and crannies. On a county road, out in the middle of nowhere, someone carved a 12' or 15' tall bear out of a tree trunk with a chainsaw.
Some odd gas stations I have come across.
http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/145
http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/1056
http://www.roadsidepeek.com/roadusa/southeast/seroadside/seroadattract/index.htm
One of my favorites, the Union Tank Car facility in Wood River, IL, now Millenium Rail:
I toured the facility while in school. It is so big, it actually rained inside the building. I also played in the scrapyard there. I still have a gas mask, and several neat rubber gaskets, from the place.
More pics here: http://www.karlhartig.com/dome/4woodriver/woodriver.html
Rotorranch wrote: loathar wrote: In Weeky Watchey(SP?) Florida, I remember an old gas station. (Sinclair?) The building itself was actually shaped like a huge dinosaur.Something of interest that's really cool to see is a rotary coal car dumper at a power plant. I remember seeing one as a kid and being amazed by it. I sat and watched it for hours.It's Harold's Auto Center, Hwy 19, actually located in Spring Hill, FL, near Weeki Wachee.Rotor
That's it! I used to live in a neighborhood 2 miles up the road from it. (The Heather) I remember someone telling me it used to be a Sinclair station.
Johnnny_reb wrote:What odd and interesting structures do you remember or have seen?
Well, there is a lot of more or less weird roadside statues and suchlike here and there. Four I've seen is:
In Norway, Illinois, someone had placed a small crashed two engined airplane on its nose in a field by the road, and put up a sign dedicating it to "all farmers and Ag related business folks that have lived thru the 'Agricultural Crash' of the 1980's." http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/2093
In Alexandria, Minnesota, there is Big Ole the huge viking, put up in support of an - umm - interesting ... claim about Alexandria being "the birth place of America" and was visited by vikings way back.
In Bemidj, Minnesota, there is big Paul Bunyan and Babe the Big Blue Ox - http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/8737
And in Fergus Falls, Otter Tail county, Minnesota, there is a fairly big statue of an otter (http://www.wlra.us/wl/wlotter.htm)
Grin, Stein
Rotorranch wrote: Lucy is not the only oversized roadside pachyderm...This is near I90/I94: Rotor
I've seen that pink elephant a bunch of times - but I don't remember it being near a road - as a matter of fact I don't remember much about them at all . . . . .
This may be really odd, but it does exist. I'm always amazed every time I pass this fantastic house with its chimney.
steinjr wrote: Johnnny_reb wrote: What odd and interesting structures do you remember or have seen? In Alexandria, Minnesota, there is Big Ole the huge viking, put up in support of an - umm - interesting ... claim about Alexandria being "the birth place of America" and was visited by vikings way back.
Johnnny_reb wrote: What odd and interesting structures do you remember or have seen?
Don't dis the runestone !!
Johnnny_reb wrote:Bump. I also seen a 200 foot high Pyramid just outside of Edenton ga.
This one?
Is this the same one?
Here's a story about it. http://www.cnn.com/US/9906/29/nuwaubians/
-Ken in Maryland (B&O modeler, former CSX modeler)
There's a cell tower in Jonesboro or Lake City, GA disguised as a pine tree. I got to get a pic of that.
CSX_road_slug wrote:When I was driving on I-81 thru southwestern Virginia, I saw a modern-style water tower painted to look like a hot-air balloon. Can't remember the name of the town though...
That's the Wytheville Water Tower.
North of it on I-81 is the Mount Jackson Water Tower Painted like a basket of apples.
steinjr wrote: In Norway, Illinois, someone had placed a small crashed two engined airplane on its nose in a field by the road, and put up a sign dedicating it to "all farmers and Ag related business folks that have lived thru the 'Agricultural Crash' of the 1980's." http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/2093 Grin, Stein
This weekend coming back from Perry Mountain (Maplesville), AL I saw a wrecked airplane sitting against a tree in front of a house on GA34 west of Franklin GA. There was a sign next to the plane, but I couldn't see what it said. I wish I had my camera with me.
Autobus Prime,
I live less than 5 miles south of the power plant you are talking about. It's First Energy in Empire, Oh. It straddles St. Rt. 7. The steel mill and bridge you are talking about, I am about 5 miles north of it. It used to be the coke plant for Weirton Steel. It is now called U.S. Carbon. (Weirton Steel which employed over 14000 people 20 years ago is now Mittal Steel and they employ less than 2000.) That brige gets covered with steel slabs whenever there is a threat of flooding!
Gotta love the Ohio Valley!
chadw wrote: CSX_road_slug wrote:When I was driving on I-81 thru southwestern Virginia, I saw a modern-style water tower painted to look like a hot-air balloon. Can't remember the name of the town though...That's the Wytheville Water Tower.North of it on I-81 is the Mount Jackson Water Tower Painted like a basket of apples.
Most of these are WAY big for model railroad application, but---
A pier with two huge Mississippi River steamboats alongside - in the middle of a waterless desert!
A couple of buildings that have part-indoor/part-outdoor roller coasters.
A huge pyramid, with a sphinx in front of it.
A building that looks like the Reader's Digest edition of the 1937 Manhattan skyline.
A 1/2 scale model of the Eiffel Tower.
A reduced-size version of the Campanile in Venice.
In case you haven't figured it out yet, I live in Las Vegas. The first example is in Primm, NV.
I didn't think the C21 was the same one. Here's another view of the one that's mostly been demolished now.