When VIA launched its Light Rapid Comfortable (LRC) train in August 1981, a demonstrator set made the rounds of Corridor cities. On August 12-13, the set visited Kingston's Outer Station. While up to this point I was more interested in the train itself, in looking at these pictures again, I'm drawn to the context. My Dad hikes over for a head-end view (top photo). Check out the OCS boxcar parked at the piggyback ramp, with power pole and Montreal Street houses, beyond. All of which I plan to model. Here's a general view of the now-quiet station and yard area (below):
Monday, 31 December 2018
Structures for my Hanley Spur Layout
As I complete structures for my HO scale Hanley Spur home layout, I'll post images here, along with links to the construction posts for each one!
So far, I have the Grand Trunk/CN Outer Station:
So far, I have the Grand Trunk/CN Outer Station:
Millard & Lumb, at Wellington Street at Place d'Armes:
Revitalized signage:
Sowards' coal-unloading trestle:
Anglin's coal, oil and lumber business at Bay & Wellington Streets and around Kingston:
The limestone Imperial Oil warehouse at North Street:
The GTR/CNR freight shed:
Structure flats - MacCosham Movers at left, Weston's Bakeries at right:
Weston's Bakeries:
The River Street bridge:
A typical Swamp Ward house (pre-layout)
The Bailey Broom Factory:
The Davis Drydock:
Wellington Street at Bay St - The Bajus Brewery:
Cataraqui Street - the National Grocers warehouse:
Next-door neighbour - the Bailey broom factory:
Across the tracks on Cataraqui Street - reworked Woolen Mill structural flat:
C.E. Macpherson metal works:
CN Express freight shed at the Outer Station:
Frontenac Floor & Wall Tile Co. Ltd. structural flat:
River Street fuel truck-loading rack:
The City (Steam) Laundry at 294 Wellington Street:
A Montreal Street garage - Provincial Tire:
The Kingston Whig-Standard newsprint warehouse on Rideau Street just south of Cataraqui St:
Ramshackle remnants - CN toolsheds at the top of the Hanley Spur just east of the Outer Station:
Dyeco at River and Orchard Streets. A little-known dye and chemical industry that's still operating!
A much-reduced footprint (bootprint?) for the Davis Tannery:
And a short time later, a re-do of the foreground tannery building
A deconstructed ex-industry, one of Kingston's modern-day brownfield sites:K-D Manufacuring on Montreal Street:.
The so-called Commandant's House, overlooking the Inner Harbour:
The S. Anglin Co. office building - Bay and Wellington Streets.
Rideau Street School/King's Town School. This will probably end up as its circa 1970 Warren plumbing supply, as it was during my modelled era.
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