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Steven, that aisleway depth in the staging area gives me pause.
Steven, that aisleway depth in the staging area gives me pause.24" is pretty narrow. And then if you have anything at all on the fascia, it's going to constrict the space even more. If you have control panels back there then it's even more difficult because one has to back up to be able to read the control panel/fascia.
Yeah, me too. Two feet is fine as a lesser-used thru aisle, but if you have to bend down to work on anything, you'll find it literally a pain-in-the-butt and/or neck. Also, you have a column intruding there reducing it to 18". It would be a squeeze for certain old-fart Midwesterners who lost the battle with middle-age spread. Something else I noticed is the sweeping curve in the upper middle, the one with five parallel tracks. It looks to me like that area is going to be really hard to reach - well beyond 24". Access is blocked from the left by the backdrop.YMMV.
Assuming the TV space is not walled in, I should think the entire layout could be shifted away from the bottom wall about a foot, and maybe to the right a half-foot or so to open up the aisle near the door just a tad (the aisle at the right end could survive being narrower versus the aisle at the left).
I think the whole thing is pretty cool.
Potentially lends itself to automatic control of trains on the main while you do switching, something I have always considered a worthy goal of a home layout.
The aisle-way issue really depends on how...er... fit you are. For me it would not be a problem (but at the club we try to stick to 1.5 Chucks.)
One main comment for now...At the ends of staging, I don't see how the turnout arrangements work for you to get Eastbounds onto the main. It seems to me that your crossovers on the main need to be 'outside' the entrances to the staging yards.
Not sure I understand all the switching track arrangements but that is much more particular, would need to understand what all those spurs are for and which industries they are to offer comments.