Good morning, Trains Nation.
Just wanted to let you know that this week's photo contest is live and posted here: http://trn.trains.com/photos-videos/trackside/2015/07/glass
We've got eight excellent submissions on the theme: Glass.
Hope you enjoy.
Best,
Steve S.
Steve SweeneyDigital Editor, Hobby
I am surprised...I voted for Alex Mayes because his picture had the most glass applied to a train. Jim Ribar was second choice since it probably had the most glass. But the surprise is at this point, five hours into the posting of the pictures and it is almost an 8 way dead heat!
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This contest is a very weird one, and the voting results reflect that wierdness.
The Alex Mayes photo is a super eye-catcher, and early so!
Mitch Goldman’s photo strikes me as way out of kilter composition-wise, but the all-important theme-wise it grows on one and is a masterpiece!
Jim Ribar's at first seemed so very much theme related, but the problem with it is the obvious glass is not railroad related.
Tom Nanos put out the weirdest one of them all. It was ludicrous ... until one figures it out. Once one does, Tom becomes among the gods!
The other ones, I don’t know that the involved glass is the key element. Maybe in someone’s imagination, but imagination is hardly THEME related.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- K.P.’s absolute “theorem” from early, early childhood that he has seen over and over and over again: Those that CAUSE a problem in the first place will act the most violently if questioned or exposed.
K. P. Harrier This contest is a very weird one, and the voting results reflect that wierdness. <snip> Tom Nanos put out the weirdest one of them all. It was ludicrous ... until one figures it out. Once one does, Tom becomes among the gods!
<snip>
Glad to increase the "weirdness quotient" a bit...as you could tell, I look at things differently... ;-)
---------Tom NanosNew England Railroad Photography www.nanosphoto.com/blog
www.nanosphoto.com
I really like Ribar's photo: lots of trains and lots of glass.
K. P. Harrier This contest is a very weird one, and the voting results reflect that wierdness. ........ Jim Ribar's at first seemed so very much theme related, but the problem with it is the obvious glass is not railroad related.
........
The old stone head house was razed in 1984 to make way for the 42-story Citigroup Center, which was completed in 1987 and now serves as the main station entrance. It also houses a ticketing area as well as a food court and other retail shops, restaurants and amenities.
The passenger platforms and adjoining facilities were renovated starting in 1992, after Metra bought them from Chicago and North Western. Upon completion of the $141 million project, the station was renamed the Richard B. Ogilvie Transportation Center in 1997, after the former governor who championed mass transit and was the major architect of legislation that established the Regional Transportation Authority.
The OTC now serves as the terminus for three Metra routes that bring more than 40,000 commuters to the station each weekday.
I went with Jim Ribar's photo. The location is near where I work and I occasionally ride out of North Western Station. Now I know what the engineer sees upon arrival.
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