View allAll Photos Tagged trainstation

More on this trainstation on its album!!!

 

Also download the LDD file for this and more MOC´s on my mediafire folder

www.mediafire.com/folder/6bj5xlxjzp3ww/Lego

 

After a whole week of building and fine detailing i finished my biggest MOC and yet its microscale, its a full featured trainstation build around the micro train system showcased before here www.flickr.com/photos/wray2064/16408908858/

 

It uses all the variations of the trains set inside a massive half meter long building, the building itself its detailed to the interiors and features common things seen on a real trainstation, partially based on the "Terminal de autobuses de oriente" here in mexico city.

 

The Building features:

-Two ticket entrances

-4 Train tracks connected by a central bridge

-A Shopping mall

-A Mc Donalds

-Two levels for stores

-The trainstation master´s office

 

The train yards features

-Cranes for loading the trains

-Lights for night time

-Rail switch system

-Maintenance office

-Train traffic control

 

Additionaly, there are two parking lots and a small park whit a small classic train engine and fountain

 

The hole build has 1821 bricks.

 

Hope you enjoy this, suggestions and comments are always welcome!

An old freight building next to the RR tracks in G.L.

Washington DC

M9, 2/50

Processed with VSCO with q1 preset

Pentacon Six TL , Carl Zeiss Biometar 80mm 2.8 , Ilford HP5 , f 8.0 , 1/125 , Epson V600

Train station of a village or small town. More pictures on mocpages (www.mocpages.com/moc.php/332620)

A train station in Berlin, Germany.

 

As a reminder, keep in mind that this picture is available only for non-commercial use and that visible attribution is required. If you'd like to use this photo outside these terms, please contact me ahead of time to arrange for a paid license.

 

Protected with PIXSY Friendly Copyright Management

This lovely station stands in downtown Orange, Virginia. The marker at the site indicates that it replaced the original station after it was destroyed in a 1908 fire. The building currently houses the local Visitor's Bureau. I have a couple of other shots of the station on my photostream, but this is the first with a trackside view. I still had to fiddle with the brightness a bit, as the light wasn't as good on this side.

Aufgenommen am Bahnhof Europaplatz in Bern

did some hdr processing with a photo i took in zurich at the trainstation.

i will show the color version, too (see the comment). couldn't decide which one i like better :(

  

please view large on black

photo taken in a small train station in Tamil Nadu INdia 1993

 

I have no idea what this booth was for

 

so does that mean we can all be moaners next week instead ? :)

Built by AT&SF in 1903. Doesn't look like it's been painted since 1903 either.

The train station in Staunton, Virginia, is the third depot to be built on this site. The first station was built by the Virginia Central Railroad in 1854 and replaced after it burned 10 years later. Architect T.J. Collins designed the current structure in the early 20th Century. Passenger trains still stop in Staunton, but the building, which once housed the Pullman Restaurant, is not currently in use. Information from Staunton by Sergei Troubetzkoy.

My entry for the LZHHM (show us how it's done) contest over at the Lowlug forum. The challenge was to recreate a better trainstation than Lego set number 60335 with 1000 or less pieces.

 

This one clocked in right under 980 pieces and would've been less if I had the correct size plates and/or tiles for the roof and white walls.

 

Inspired by the original set, but also by the trainstation in our village, this one clocked in right under 980 pieces including the minifigures and would've been less if I had the correct size plates and/or tiles for the roof and white walls.

 

More pictures can be found at:

www.bricksafe.com/pages/ClipsAndTiles/lzhhm-trainstation

 

For more entries and other MOCs by my fellow lug members check out:

www.lowlug.com/forum/

On the Bluebell Railway

Built in 1905 in Kramer, CA and later moved west to Boron. Now part of the 20 Mule Team Museum.

 

(This photo is a re-shoot of one from 10 years ago. The roof has been replaced and the station signboard repainted, but otherwise it is unchanged.)

Copyright 2017 Patia Stephens

Wenn ihr interesse habt ein paar meiner Fotos zu drucken könnt ihr das hier tun (nur in Deutschland Verfügbar):

www.zoomwork.com/gallery/view/MC41NjMwMjQwMCAxNDUwODE3NjQz/

 

If you're interested in printing some of my pictures you can take a look here (only available in Germany): www.zoomwork.com/gallery/view/MC41NjMwMjQwMCAxNDUwODE3NjQz/

King Street Station is a train station in Seattle, Washington, United States. It is served by Amtrak's Cascades, Coast Starlight, and Empire Builder, as well as Sounder commuter trains run by Sound Transit. The station also anchors a major transit hub, which includes Link light rail at International District/Chinatown station and Seattle Streetcar service. It is located at the south end of Downtown Seattle in the Pioneer Square neighborhood, near the intersection of South Jackson Street and 4th Avenue South, and has four major entrances. It is the 15th-busiest station on the Amtrak system, serving as the hub for the Pacific Northwest region.

 

Opened on May 10, 1906, it served as a union station for the Great Northern Railway and the Northern Pacific Railway, both owned by James J. Hill. -- Wikipedia

Ligurien, Italien. September 2011.

  

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