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A few years ago at York I purchased what I was told were an architectural firm's "concept models" for a contract on which the firm hoped to be hired.  I was able to purchase seven items including: a switching tower, a large signal bridge, an electrical control distribution box, and several electrical high voltage towers.  Each item appears to be hand built and use a combination of solder and tiny rivets to fasten their various parts together.  All are of a scale perfect for Standard Gauge.   Does anyone have or has anyone seen anything similar to these items and can anyone confirm that architectural firms actually built concept models like these out of metal?      

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Bob Nelson

 

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Last edited by navy.seal
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As a practicing architect I can say with absolute certainty those are not 'concept' architectural models. In fact most architectural firms would not go to the trouble of building any concept or study models out of metal - much to complicated, expensive and time consuming. If I where to venture a guess I would say those models are actually home made and somewhat 'out-of-scale' for what they're supposed to represent.

Looks like a lot of detail, any idea when they might of been produced 30's/40's, 50's?
I like the grating on the steps and the windows on the building. Do the windows and doors open and close?
Looks like they were not painted, was the metal galvanized or zinc plated?
Are the insulators plastic or glass?
Maybe a firm that made the real stuff had these in a conference room just for reference and could of had them made in their machine shop.
They would look great on a layout. 

I was given some concept models for cranes when I was a kid and I ruined them all playing with them, darn it.

I've seen plenty of concept models over the years and I'd bet money that these aren't that. They're way too 'toylike' for a company to use as a concept model for any client for what is supposed to be a full-sized structure.

Now, concept models for a toy company? That's a possibility.

RonH posted:

Looks like a lot of detail, any idea when they might of been produced 30's/40's, 50's?
I like the grating on the steps and the windows on the building. Do the windows and doors open and close?
Looks like they were not painted, was the metal galvanized or zinc plated?
Are the insulators plastic or glass?
Maybe a firm that made the real stuff had these in a conference room just for reference and could of had them made in their machine shop.
They would look great on a layout. 

RonH,

Unfortunately, I don't know when they were made.

Both the windows and the doors open and close.

I believe most of the metal is galvanized except for the steps.

I am not sure, but I believe the insulators are plastic.  I will check and get back to you if I'm wrong and they are glass.

They do look great on SGMA layouts!  Come see them in action this November in Milwaukee at Trainfest 2016.

Bob Nelson

Last edited by navy.seal

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