Antony Posted December 24, 2025 Posted December 24, 2025 The NCC made good use of concrete structures from fence posts to buildings and had a concrete casting yard at York Road. One of their products was the goods shed at Doagh, built from cast concrete sections in 1916. I have a small goods area so I thought that a reduced size shed like the one at Doagh would be ideal. I have some photographs taken during construction - If I remember correctly, I photographed them from a page in a book at the IRRS premises. I presume they were official photographs by the NCC. The basic structure is bass wood, balsa and 2mm mdf cutwith a knife or on my small bandsaw. A machine that has proved invaluable for many projects on the layout! The shell is then overlaid with strips of Evergreen plastic to build up the features. There's also a picture of it in Ian Sinclair's book 'Along UTA Lines' during its lifetime. I made the base separately And now approaching completion. I'm not modelling any detail inside and the rear is just mdf. Time is of the essence! Some weathering will improve its appearance. 13
Colonel Posted December 25, 2025 Posted December 25, 2025 Looks way nicer that the prototype, which must have been a horrible place to work, especially in winter. Handsome 2-4-0 lurking in the background. 1
Galteemore Posted December 27, 2025 Posted December 27, 2025 Very nice build. I’d no idea that the NCC had its own Exmouth Junction style concrete works! Mountmellick in Laois had a similar structure which is still extant. Image courtesy late Fred Dean 1
Antony Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago Quote Very nice build. I’d no idea that the NCC had its own Exmouth Junction style concrete works! Mountmellick in Laois had a similar structure which is still extant. Image courtesy late Fred Dean Now that's interesting! A very similar design, I presume most railways in that era would have embraced concrete as a building material. 1
jhb171achill Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 9 minutes ago, Antony said: Now that's interesting! A very similar design, I presume most railways in that era would have embraced concrete as a building material. Not as much as you'd expect, as the basic buildings infrastructure had been so solidly built (usually out of stone) some 20-50 years earlier, when the various lines originally opened. However, it WAS used when necessary by the GSR, GNR and NCC. Very little use of it in other companies for reasons stated.
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