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I find wall paint lasts quite a while. I used the last of my sky blue color recently and was surprised to see it dated to 2009 on the label.Those new Seaboard locos look pretty good too!
I guess it depends on what that structure now represents on your layout. What does it "do?" I should think three-story brick structures are not super-common in rural NC.
I think it could work as the railroad offices.It acts as a nice semi-viewblock/scenic bookend by rising over the overpass, and paving the area now green will give a little more industrial feel to the yard, extending the town a bit.Good opportunity for some lighting, both at the paved lot & maybe into the yard some.It's really about what kind of mood/feel you want at the end of the yard.If you do place the building there, I'd pop those stairs off and rotate left to descend next to the building (with the handrails trackside).They won't stick out as far, too.
As long as it's kept cool, DRY, and doesn't go through extreme temperatures, like a basement, and is sealed fairly well, it should last years. Another trick is to seal the lid back on good, and store the can upside down. The paint will seal any openings.
So this thread has become talk about how to watch the paint NOT dry?
1. put an old faded ACL decal or sign on the brick expanse on the short side.
2. print a "seaboard System Regional Operations Center" sign on gloss photo paper and hang it on the long side over the door and stairway.
3. Rotate the building 90 degrees, and slide it back to the edge of the layout.
4. Put your lot in the open space and put a gravel road leading away from it across the tracks.
Wait this cannot proceed without Oldeast's input on this. Where were some YMCAs that were right at the tracks. Maybe tilt it a bit to match the angle of the road, this will pull back the steps a bit.
Dave, Yes it's a three story building, but what does the building look like in the big empty space in front of the warehouse or maybe it's a freight station in the above photo in Aberdeen? Maybe I'm the odd man out, but placing the a big three story building at that end of the yard just seems out of place? Where would everyone park that worked in the building? Big administration building are usually associated with big parking lots for the employees. Just my two cents