My entry will be a little different. The famed Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge railroad was built to haul silver and gold from the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado. The Silver Panic of 1893 put many of the silver mines out of business and the Great Depression almost finished it all off for good. By the 1940s the two biggest mining and milling concerns along the RGS were the Pandora mine at Telluride and the colossal Pro Patria Mill at Rico.
I'm planning to model Rico as part of my RGS First District HOn3 model railroad. The Pro Patria Mill was enormous...second perhaps only to a few of the big mills north of Silverton. It dominated the town of Rico until its destruction shortly after the RGS was abandoned. Some pictures:
https://ngtrainpics.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RD139-RGS-Burns-Canyon-to-Rico-1/G0000O9ghGdmGF1U/I0000bPY_Y3Uw.I4/C0000Vd2qoA2MbNUhttps://ngtrainpics.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RD140-RGS-Burns-Canyon-to-Rico-2/G0000_JI2BlAWziA/I0000lsLYoSJbFiA/C0000Vd2qoA2MbNUBill Banta of Banta Modelworks makes an amazingly detailed model of this mill (photos from Banta's website):
The cost for the HO scale kit is a whopping $475. However, when you consider the size, the number of parts, and the overall Banta quality, that's actually not unreasonable at all.
So why aren't I just buying the kit?
The size.
This monster is over two feet wide!
My itty-bitty Rico is going to be cramped enough without a mill the size of a microwave oven. So my plan is to kitbash a mill using plastic kits that captures the general look but isn't a faithful reproduction. A student of the RGS will know that there should be a big old brown-colored stamp mill north and east of the Rico depot served by a spur off the Rico house track. If I can capture the overall shape my hope is that it will be close enough not to draw scrutiny.
I'm starting with these two plastic kits:
I'll also be scratchbuilding a little bit.
To be clear, the real mill was vertical board sheathed and my kits are board-and-batten. I'm also not doing all the dormers. Just a few to capture the look. So I guess you could call this "proto-lancing?"