Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Having detailed Beeston Market, Beeston Castle and Peckforton stations, I've now moved further Down the line to Bulkeley.
https://riksrailway.blogspot.com/2020/0 ... ation.html
Rik
The main problem with the station from a modelling point of view was that its two sidings were to the front of the station - ie on the viewing side. Whilst this made shunting easier, it meant that it wasn't possible to model any lineside industries on the sidings - there simply wasn't room! So, I bit the bullet and decided to revise the layout to add a new siding to the rear of the raised bed, thereby providing an opportunity for a half relief building to be positioned behind it.
So, I set to work, and after a bit of fettling, the layout has been revamped.
For more detail see -
Rik
- Soar Valley Light
- Driver
- Posts: 1451
- Joined: Sun Dec 08, 2013 5:18 pm
- Location: North West Leicestershire
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Nice work Rik. The new siding looks like it's always been there!
Andrew
Andrew
"Smith! Why do you only come to work four days a week?
"'cause I can't manage on three gaffer!"
"'cause I can't manage on three gaffer!"
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5243
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Wonderful job Rik, I'm sure your creative skills will soon make the site a useful addition to the timetable with related stock shunted into the various sidings there.
Unless I'm mistaken, Summer seems to have arrived early in Cheshire!
Unless I'm mistaken, Summer seems to have arrived early in Cheshire!
The best things in life are free.... so why am I doing this?
- andymctractor
- Trainee Driver
- Posts: 705
- Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2013 12:03 am
- Location: Suffolk, UK
- Contact:
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Rik, on your railway, sidings are for shunting on as you have the ultimate slow and detailed control of your locomotives, unlike many other 16millers who have other priorities. Look forward to seeing those sidings being used as you've designed them. Great stuff.
I'm looking forward to racking your brains again when I get round to building myself some battery powered steam outline locos that will need RC.
I'm looking forward to racking your brains again when I get round to building myself some battery powered steam outline locos that will need RC.
Regards
Andy McMahon
If it moves, salute it. ย If it doesn't move, paint it. (RN sailors basic skills course 1968)
Andy McMahon
If it moves, salute it. ย If it doesn't move, paint it. (RN sailors basic skills course 1968)
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
What a brilliant improvement Rik, really looking forward to videos of it in operation.
Still in Winter here, with constant rain. It's stopped the son-in-law laying the flags for 4 weeks now.
Still in Winter here, with constant rain. It's stopped the son-in-law laying the flags for 4 weeks now.
ROD
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Thanks folks
Yes, looking forward to the next running session. I'll need to amend the freight management program slightly to generate slightly more diverse traffic to Bulkeley. Still not decided whether the new siding will serve a Boneworks or a Brickworks. A Boneworks will provide more opportunities for traffic in as well as out; I assume a Brickworks mostly just had outward traffic.
These two industries used to be adjacent to each other in the locality of my hypothetical railway, so I can claim a precedent (Beeston Castle is just behind the chimney in the first photo - http://www.tattenhallhistory.co.uk/tatt ... boneworks/ )
Rik
PS Apparently, the Boneworks used to take elephant manure and sometimes carcases from Chester Zoo. Now that might make for very interesting inward traffic.....
Yes, looking forward to the next running session. I'll need to amend the freight management program slightly to generate slightly more diverse traffic to Bulkeley. Still not decided whether the new siding will serve a Boneworks or a Brickworks. A Boneworks will provide more opportunities for traffic in as well as out; I assume a Brickworks mostly just had outward traffic.
These two industries used to be adjacent to each other in the locality of my hypothetical railway, so I can claim a precedent (Beeston Castle is just behind the chimney in the first photo - http://www.tattenhallhistory.co.uk/tatt ... boneworks/ )
Rik
PS Apparently, the Boneworks used to take elephant manure and sometimes carcases from Chester Zoo. Now that might make for very interesting inward traffic.....
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Amazes me how you managed to get out and do all that at this time of year! Looks to have been worth it though, well done.
On Grafton (P4) which had a branch off the MSWJR main line, serving Dodsdown brickworks, we used to run 5 empty brick wagons plus two loaded coal in, and then 5 loaded bricks and two coal empties out. Plus you can add the odd additional van or open with timber and anything else you think the works might need.
Mostly outbound obviously, but also coal in to fire the kilns.
On Grafton (P4) which had a branch off the MSWJR main line, serving Dodsdown brickworks, we used to run 5 empty brick wagons plus two loaded coal in, and then 5 loaded bricks and two coal empties out. Plus you can add the odd additional van or open with timber and anything else you think the works might need.
Philip
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Brickworks were usually located close to their claypit, but they used a lot of fuel, so unless there was a coal mine on site that presumably had to come in by rail.
There's also scope for a small tramway, or a rope haulage, to transport the clay from the pit to the works.
It would be a fair bet that the locals would be much happier with a brickworks as a neighbour. How are you planning to provide the correct โambienceโ for a boneworks?
Regards,
Graeme
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
I think I'll pass on creating the olfactory element of the Boneworks. Here's an extract from the recollections of a local resident
RikThe stench from the Boneworks โ donโt mention it โ I can smell it now. It always smelled, our bungalow was right opposite โ it was worse in the summer months. There was a big manure heap with elephant manure from the zoo. It used to come in off the railway and was brought by a horse and cart and was dumped right in front of our bungalow. The bones came in the same way and they were all piled up
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Another local's recollection of the Boneworks.
RikI got to know quite a lot about the Boneworks when visiting my grandfather at the site. Bones were brought from the abattoir to the Boneworks by Bill Kinsey, a Tattenhall haulier. During the war years, when he carted the bones through the village, the residents complained of the quite dreadful smell, following which a tarpaulin was used to cover the bones. The bones (and flesh) were stored in the โCrackerโ shed and local fishermen used to come down to the shed for maggots. The bones then went to the industrial grinder known as the โHummerโ (so called because of the noise that it made) which created a jelly-like substance (gelatin). The gelatin came back in pots and could be sliced, not unlike a loaf of bread. My mother and Aunt Molly then carried the trays (on which were the large slices of gelatin) to the kilns/cubicles where the gelatin was dried. Coal for the drying kilns was brought in by barge using the nearby Shropshire Union Canal. Effluent from the yard ran into a ditch near the road. It was said that you always knew when you were approaching the Boneworks, even in foggy weather, because of this โstinky ditchโ!!
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Good work Rik, and the references to local history help to bring the project to life. Be interesting to see which option you go for. I also like the detail on your sketch plans - 'edge of known world'
Phil
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
- tom_tom_go
- Driver
- Posts: 4824
- Joined: Wed Feb 23, 2011 3:08 am
- Location: Kent, UK
- Contact:
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
So much space to play on your railway Rik.
I would of loved to have created a similar layout as live steam with a Slomo allows for operational running just like you do with your electric locos.
Looking forward to a video of it all in action soon!
I would of loved to have created a similar layout as live steam with a Slomo allows for operational running just like you do with your electric locos.
Looking forward to a video of it all in action soon!
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
You'll remember that the new siding at the front of Bulkeley was left in a somewhat precarious state:
Time for a bit of landscaping. First of all the sandstone cladding was removed from the old wall - leaving the siding in an even more precarious position. .
Then a new wall was constructed. I decided it was far too complicated to try demolishing the old wall. .
The space between old and new was then filled with soil. Fortunately, I'd just dug a soakaway for the guttering from the new workshop and so had almost exactly the right amount of soil to spare - coincidence, rather than careful planning! . .
I am now in the process of cladding the new wall with sandstone. Unfortunately, Storm Ciara intervened and so I've not been able to finish that job. . .
Apologies for the blurriness of some photos - but it was starting to get dark when I took them.
Next job will be planting the new bed and maybe thinking about some sort of facilities for the new siding.....
Rik
.Time for a bit of landscaping. First of all the sandstone cladding was removed from the old wall - leaving the siding in an even more precarious position. .
Then a new wall was constructed. I decided it was far too complicated to try demolishing the old wall. .
The space between old and new was then filled with soil. Fortunately, I'd just dug a soakaway for the guttering from the new workshop and so had almost exactly the right amount of soil to spare - coincidence, rather than careful planning! . .
I am now in the process of cladding the new wall with sandstone. Unfortunately, Storm Ciara intervened and so I've not been able to finish that job. . .
Apologies for the blurriness of some photos - but it was starting to get dark when I took them.
Next job will be planting the new bed and maybe thinking about some sort of facilities for the new siding.....
Rik
Last edited by ge_rik on Mon Feb 10, 2020 10:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5243
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Good work Rik, nothing like that would be possible in this area with the current weather conditions.
The best things in life are free.... so why am I doing this?
-
- Trainee Driver
- Posts: 664
- Joined: Wed Sep 21, 2011 9:24 pm
- Location: kent england
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
This will be a lovely rustic station area. I do like the bridge, and is that a charming wee cottage I spy atop the rockery.
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5243
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
This is garden railway modelling by stealth! Just a few square feet at a time.... she will hardly notice.
The best things in life are free.... so why am I doing this?
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Not yet decided what to do with the extra bit of landscape. Maybe a goods shed or even a coal shed like they had at Blythburgh on the Southwold.invicta280 wrote: โMon Feb 10, 2020 11:47 pm This will be a lovely rustic station area. I do like the bridge, and is that a charming wee cottage I spy atop the rockery.
The cottage is a pottery model from Stanton Abbott. No longer trading as far as I can see.
Rik
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
Actually, Linda is very tolerant as to my incursions. As long as she has access to her veg beds and greenhouse, she's quite happy. Mind you, she hasn't noticed that the raised veg beds just happen to be the same height as the railway raised beds. Pure coincidence, of coursePeter Butler wrote: โTue Feb 11, 2020 10:13 am This is garden railway modelling by stealth! Just a few square feet at a time.... she will hardly notice.
Rik
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
.....she hasn't noticed that the raised veg beds just happen to be the same height as the railway raised beds. Pure coincidence, of course
..
There was a brickworks in Longton where I used to live Rik. Unfortunately the works are now residential, with the clay pit now a Nature Reserve.
Longton Brickcroft Nature Reserve.
..
There was a brickworks in Longton where I used to live Rik. Unfortunately the works are now residential, with the clay pit now a Nature Reserve.
Longton Brickcroft Nature Reserve.
ROD
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
- tom_tom_go
- Driver
- Posts: 4824
- Joined: Wed Feb 23, 2011 3:08 am
- Location: Kent, UK
- Contact:
Re: Remodelling Bulkeley Station
I would be quite happy living next to a nature reserve rather than a brickworks Rod!
I wanted raised beds in my garden when I first started planning the now closed RWLR, however, it did not fit in with the 'planning committee' ideas. Next house, maybe...
I wanted raised beds in my garden when I first started planning the now closed RWLR, however, it did not fit in with the 'planning committee' ideas. Next house, maybe...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest