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I am missing how you get to the upper level staging from the main deck?
More observation than anything else... I presume the lift bridge spans a door which opens out and the upper level is a high duck-under. But the lower level duck-under will be a PITA and the upper level (albeit an easier duck-under for most) is too close to the lower to make a door-width a tilt-up feasible, same for a parallel slide-up. It seems you have two options - a drop-down for the lower-level or a swing-in(to the room). But the drop-down is also dangerous because you'll need some depth to model the track level-to-water scenery and then more depth for the bridge, and the bridge, the most fragile part of the unit, is first to be brushed against when someone enters the room. My recommendation is a swing-in.
Fortunately the old layout lives on and was sold to a good friend.. here it is here being reassembled.http://bninthenorthwest.blogspot.com.au/
Thats great! I've been thinking about your plan some more and one thing that strikes me is that you've had to sacrifice valuable real estate for not one, but two helices (half helices, really). I especially don't care for the half-helix at the end of the peninsula, which eats a lot of space, but doesn't really gain you very much since you are treating both sides of the peninsula as if they were at the same level. If you held your nose and made that one a full helix, you could stack the two peninsula scenes and pick up some valuable aisle space in the process. You could also leave both of those scenes open across the peninsula, which would open up the space a bit more (and let operators choose which side of the aisle they wanted to use while they work). Then you could then eliminate the helix in the corner and find a more efficient way to pack the staging at either end. For example, the balloon tracks could make use of the base of the peninsula instead of that whole corner.Just some food for thought.
Tthe half-helix at the end of the peninsula, which eats a lot of space, but doesn't really gain you very much
Then you could then eliminate the helix in the corner and find a more efficient way to pack the staging at either end.