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I'm thinking I need to start working on Camden Station, or Queen City... Maybe Grafton and the hotel!
The stub trackage in the passenger terminal screams Washington, D.C. to me.
It does lend itself to a Union Station motif. I'm thinking the loop track in front of the station would be below street level, so a terminal building with a concourse behind, with steps down to the platforms. That would give me a spot for a bus and/or trolley at that end with some cityscape. I've got scraps from one of those big old German stations to rework as a head house... once I sort the track plan, I'll figure out how much space it will need.
I was trying to figure out a way to do Broad Street in Richmond, with the loop actually being part of the station tracks, but it would just require way too much room to pull off, or make the necessary train length too short to make fun to watch. I'd like to have a track for mail and express cars, but that might be too much like operations, although it would provide a place to park head end traffic and reduce the needed length of the platform tracks... Hmmm..
So let's think about that for a second...The train shed looks to accommodate 6 tracks. I could make the platforms parallel to the main along the back wall, so the two mains run through, then stub the other four? Oh, and another wrench in the design machine, since we're doing DC cab control, each track would have to be long enough for 4-5 cars plus its assigned power... I'll have to be able to isolate each track electrically to be able to operate one train while storing the others to keep the operation simple. That translates to about 42". So that would give me the ability to stage four trains and run one, then add a shorter track just outside the shed to put 4 or 5 mail and express cars... A crossover located prior to the station would allow the running train to arrive wrong rail on the freight track and pause while the next train is put together... pulling the appropriate mail car, adding it to the consist, and then pulling out onto the "right" main... Then the arriving train can be switched into the platform without having to back through the S of the next crossover... Does that make sense.
...each track would have to be long enough for 4-5 cars plus its assigned power... I'll have to be able to isolate each track electrically to be able to operate one train while storing the others to keep the operation simple. That translates to about 42"....
Also likely to work out a solution that doesn't involve a double slip. I'm trying to use (more or less) vintage track, and those old ones are notoriously finicky, at least more finicky than I want to have on the back side of the table.