Chadbury: A Town and Industrial Scape in '0' Gauge

Chadbury: A Town and Industrial Scape in '0' Gauge

Eric Bottomley
Our Price:  £7.99
List Price:  £25.00
Saving Of:  68%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Eric Bottomley
Condition:  New
Format:  Hardback
Pages:  155
Publisher:  Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Year:  2017
ISBN:  9781473876323

Most people's perception of a model railway is an arrangement of track work, decorated with some buildings and a cursory backdrop rising briefly to a sloping ceiling. Not so with Chadbury. When you walk into what was a 17ft square, double garage, you enter another world. The eyes look up before they look down at a painted backdrop, which is 8ft high and painted in oils, with watercolour landscapes of the Pennine hills. A dark satanic sky rises above the 'Cliff' cotton mill, which is 7ft wide to a tower top at 40 inches high, along with with 166 windows. As you enter, on the left you see a canal basin surrounded by factories that continue around the layout until the town of Chadbury is reached. The doorway is bridged by a girder bridge, which comples a continuous circular track. To the left lies the shed area, to the right lies the station. At a tower level to the main layout lies a street lined with terraced houses and further industrial and wharf buildings serving another canal. Creating the various buildings have been a great interest of mine, and I have demonstrated how I build and weather them in the book.
All the buildings light up, providing both a daytime and night-time look to the layout. It is DCC operated, and my loco stock is ex-LMS and LNER in a begrimed BR livery. Notes on materials used, tips on weathering and building dimensions are all there to help, and hopefully inspire, the would-be modeller. The book includes over 100 photographs and a detailed track plan.

You may also like
Origins of Form: The Shape of Natural and Man Made Things - Why They Came to be the Way They are and How They Change
Christopher Williams
Condition: Used, Like New
£2.19

This book is about the shape of things. What limits the height of a tree, why is a large ship or office building more efficient than a small one, what is the similarity between a human rib cage and an airplane, or a bison and a cantilevered bridge? How might we plan for things to improve as they are ...


Free Hands and Minds: Pioneering Australian Legal Scholars
Dr Susan Bartie
Condition: New
£85.00   £19.95

Peter Brett (1918-1975), Alice Erh-Soon Tay (1934-2004) and Geoffrey Sawer (1910-1996) are key, yet largely overlooked, members of Australia's first community of legal scholars. This book is a critical study of how their ideas and endeavours contributed to Australia's discipline of law and the first ...


Holistic Anthropology: Emergence and Convergence
Condition: New
£7.99

Given the broad reach of anthropology as the science of humankind, there are times when the subject fragments into specialisms and times when there is rapprochement. Rather than just seeing them as reactions to each other, it is perhaps better to say that both tendencies co-exist and that it is very much a matter of perspective...