mrcheddar
American Railroads, Swiss Railways, Travel

I have been lurking here in the background since 2013. Back then I lived in a flat, I had my trains on a table, and I dreamed about having a garden railway. I read garden railway forums and magazines, joined a G-scale club and visited as many garden railways as I could.
In 2016 things started happening. After years of planning, saving and waiting, I was able to start building my garden railway, along with the remodeling of a little old house. My main theme is American Railroads, in particular the Rio Grande Narrow Gauge Railways, in the scale 1: 20,3. But I also really love our local RhB Railways. I just couldn't decide, so I run both. My trains run through Colorado and Graubünden. In this thread I will start at the beginning and document the last two and half years of building the railway, up to the present day.
Mooseville? That could be Colorado, and sound like the place where I live.
The garden railroad runs round the house in the form of an 8. The dotted line is Phase 2, completed in 2018. In the shed I converted a garage into a storage yard and workshop converted. The trains run down a long ramp into the garden.

I use LGB and Thiel switches / points with an R5 radius or larger. The maximum gradient is 2%. I run track power and DCC, with a Massoth DCC unit and Massoth wireless hand held controllers.
In the years of planning I drew the whole railway in 3D, using the free Sketchup software:

In August 2016 the remodeling of the house started. Among other things, a heat pump heater was installed in the shed, making a ditch between the two buildings necessary. Since construction workers and excavators were already on site, I commission them with some railway construction.
Breaking ground:

In front of the house we started on a raised platform for the station and the town site. The platform is about 11 meters long and 2.5 meters wide:

Part of the platform has a concrete surface with very slight incline, to drain off rainwater. This area will be for the street and buildings. The other part is filled with gravel, where the rail yard is going to be, with a coaling tower and a engine shed . The gravel allows for spontaneous changes.

In early 2017, I started work on the storage yard inside the garage, on a purpose built table, about 30 cm off the ground. Any higher, and the gradient down into the garden would be too steep.


More in the next installment. Watch this space!
In 2016 things started happening. After years of planning, saving and waiting, I was able to start building my garden railway, along with the remodeling of a little old house. My main theme is American Railroads, in particular the Rio Grande Narrow Gauge Railways, in the scale 1: 20,3. But I also really love our local RhB Railways. I just couldn't decide, so I run both. My trains run through Colorado and Graubünden. In this thread I will start at the beginning and document the last two and half years of building the railway, up to the present day.
Mooseville? That could be Colorado, and sound like the place where I live.
The garden railroad runs round the house in the form of an 8. The dotted line is Phase 2, completed in 2018. In the shed I converted a garage into a storage yard and workshop converted. The trains run down a long ramp into the garden.

I use LGB and Thiel switches / points with an R5 radius or larger. The maximum gradient is 2%. I run track power and DCC, with a Massoth DCC unit and Massoth wireless hand held controllers.
In the years of planning I drew the whole railway in 3D, using the free Sketchup software:

In August 2016 the remodeling of the house started. Among other things, a heat pump heater was installed in the shed, making a ditch between the two buildings necessary. Since construction workers and excavators were already on site, I commission them with some railway construction.
Breaking ground:

In front of the house we started on a raised platform for the station and the town site. The platform is about 11 meters long and 2.5 meters wide:

Part of the platform has a concrete surface with very slight incline, to drain off rainwater. This area will be for the street and buildings. The other part is filled with gravel, where the rail yard is going to be, with a coaling tower and a engine shed . The gravel allows for spontaneous changes.

In early 2017, I started work on the storage yard inside the garage, on a purpose built table, about 30 cm off the ground. Any higher, and the gradient down into the garden would be too steep.


More in the next installment. Watch this space!

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