Canada lost three great Canadian model railroad club layouts in the past couple of years:
The Aberfoyle Junction near
Aberfoyle, Ont., the Canada Central in Montreal and
the Toronto Model Railroad Club.
Fortunately, w still have the Edmonton Model Railroad Association’s Monashee Pacific Railway.
The Edmonton Model Railroad Association was formed in 1946. The club built layouts in several locations before constructing a permanent home at the
city's Fort Edmonton Park
The layout, which is still under construction, is based on an actual railroad that was surveyed and chartered in central British Columbia in 1896, but never built. As proposed, it was to link Vernon and Castlegar by way of the Monashee Mountains.
The Monashee Pacific represents what the club feels the railroad would have looked like in 1959, had it actually been built. Choosing this era gives them a chance to run a mix of steam and diesel power.
Home of the Monashee Pacific |
The layout is a two-level mushroom design, which allows almost twice as much mainline running as would be possible on a single level.
Route of the Monashee Pacific |
The mainline itself is 785 feet long; it winds its way through 10 separate aisles, representing rolling hills, river valleys, and steep mountain terrain before arriving at Castlegar.
Most of the track is code 83 flexible track, with some hand laid track in special locations. The control system is Digitrax digital command control, with handheld radio controllers allowing an engineer to stay close to the train.
The Monashee Pacific was featured in Train 7, Track 5 of Canadian Railway Modeller.
Click here to visit the
club's website.
For more Great Canadian Model Railroads, check out the GCMR Index.
For more Great Canadian Model Railroads, check out the GCMR Index.
Hi John:
ReplyDeleteGood news! The Aberfoyle railway lives on...
http://themodelrailwayshow.com/cn1950s/?p=4033
Cheers!
You're right, Trevor--the Aberfoyle and Toronto layouts will be re-born in new locations. Not sure about the Montreal club, though.
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