Trains.com

Subscriber & Member Login

Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!

Suydam Structure Building Kits

10624 views
10 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    January 2013
  • 176 posts
Suydam Structure Building Kits
Posted by Run Eight on Friday, September 15, 2017 4:44 PM

Another old line firm. A big bang... for little bucks.

Die cut illustration board for some kits...

Stamped sheet metal for others.

Good basic kits,step by step instructions for beginners and advanced.

The metal kits, with step by step soldering instructions, taught you how to become successfull in soldering skills.

Their instructions, were easy to follow.

I think a company down San Diego way, by the name of Alpine Models, still produces most of the kit line today.

Saydum, also had a traction model line also.

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Chamberlain, ME
  • 5,084 posts
Posted by G Paine on Friday, September 15, 2017 5:03 PM

Alpine Division took over the California Model structures line which had taken over Suydam Models (maybe there was one more in the midddle as well).

http://www.alpinemodels.com/index.html

The tinplate metal buildings have been discontinued because the material is no longer available. The courrugated buildings are now mat board. And the kits are laser cut instead of die cut.

George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch 

  • Member since
    January 2009
  • From: Bakersfield, CA 93308
  • 6,526 posts
Posted by RR_Mel on Friday, September 15, 2017 6:12 PM

I built several Suydam kits back in their day as well as the Southern Pacific Passenger Station kit currently the center piece on my layout.   It was originally a Suydam/California Models kit, it was an Alpine Division kit when I bought it back in the 90s.
 
 
 
The 84 passengers and SP employees didn't come with the kit, the covered passenger area is a Walthers kit add on, the fence is Atlas.  The entire structure is covered with Campbell 800 shingles.  The Campbell shingles and Northeast Scale Lumber structure corner posts came in the Alpine kit.
 
 
Great kits back then. 
 
 
 
Mel
 
Modeling the early to mid 1950s SP in HO scale since 1951
 
My Model Railroad   
 
Bakersfield, California
 
I'm beginning to realize that aging is not for wimps.
 
  • Member since
    June 2002
  • From: Pittsburgh, PA
  • 470 posts
Posted by ctyclsscs on Friday, September 15, 2017 7:24 PM

Didn't almost every layout have their Swift Packing Plant on it? It actually looked pretty decent considering there weren't many large American style buildings available back then.

Jim

  • Member since
    January 2007
  • From: Kentucky
  • 10,660 posts
Posted by Heartland Division CB&Q on Saturday, September 16, 2017 8:39 AM

I just built an old Suydam kit last year. It is a metal office building kit which I included in a rural scene with several other buildings. The good news is you need not solder, but instead you may now use modern adhesives to glue it together. 

It is the building behind the orange tractor trailer in this photo. 

GARRY

HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR

EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Chamberlain, ME
  • 5,084 posts
Posted by G Paine on Saturday, September 16, 2017 10:34 AM

I built this Suydam metal kit some time ago, and had it on a part of my layout that has been rebuilt. It is now in storage awaiting a new site on my present layout

George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch 

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
  • 21,484 posts
Posted by MisterBeasley on Saturday, September 16, 2017 8:35 PM

ctyclsscs
Didn't almost every layout have their Swift Packing Plant on it? It actually looked pretty decent considering there weren't many large American style buildings available back then.

I got this in a yard sale box of trains back in the 1960s.  I've had it since then.  This is its second layout.  I appended it to a Walthers stockyard.  I love this old structure and hopefully I'll have another layout to put it on in the future.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

  • Member since
    January 2015
  • From: Duluth, MN
  • 424 posts
Posted by OT Dean on Sunday, September 17, 2017 12:49 AM

Thanks for the link, G Paine.  I clicked on it and had a pleasant trip down Memory Lane.  I had several Suydam (BTW, if you new guys didn't know, it's pronounced SIGH-dum) structures on my HO railroads, back in the Good Ol' Days.  Boy, I sure miss my folks' basement, with my Cozy Nook--er, workshop, in a corner next to the railroad yard.

Deano

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Anaheim, CA Bayfield, CO
  • 1,829 posts
Posted by Southwest Chief on Wednesday, September 20, 2017 11:52 AM

I absolutely love Suydam kits.  The cardstock kits are pretty easy to build and look great when finished. 

Also it was/is hard to find Southern California style buildings in model railroading (HO scale).  Most HO building architecture is based on midwest or east coast prototypes...or European.

Here are some of the old Suydam tract houses on my layout.  Unfortuntely the tract houses are not currently in production under Alpine Division Scale Models.  But nothing says Southern California like tract houses:

Matt from Anaheim, CA and Bayfield, CO
Click Here for my model train photo website

  • Member since
    January 2007
  • 599 posts
Posted by azrail on Wednesday, September 20, 2017 2:28 PM

The Bekins warehouse was the same building with different signs and details

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • 2,314 posts
Posted by don7 on Saturday, September 23, 2017 7:54 PM

The Sudam metal corrigated kits were my favorite. With a decent weathering job they looked so realistic.  I also liked the mat board kits but with the printed exterior finish they did not look nearly as realistic as the metal corrigated kits.

A few years ago there was an E-bay listing for a few of their old metal corrigated kits. The add had no pictures and it was kind of vague as well.It mentioned that the kits had been opened and that there was no way to know if all the parts were there. It turned out only one of the kits in fact had been opened and all parts were in fact there.

I thought I was bidding on a roundhouse and also a add on kit for the roundhouse and also the American Chemical and Potash building. I won that auction and I received two of each of the kits and also two Wyoming Coal Mine kits, which had not even been mentioned in the add.

I still have those kits sitting in my closet. I really need to do something about the hoard of kits I have sitting in my close, a bunch of Campbell kits as well.

Subscriber & Member Login

Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!

Users Online

There are no community member online

Search the Community

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Model Railroader Newsletter See all
Sign up for our FREE e-newsletter and get model railroad news in your inbox!