So I have a few other projects I'm working on for the club, none of which is really "threadworthy" on its own. As such, I figured it would make sense to group them up here and highlight any potentially useful ideas.
The first project is a building "flat" (really more like half a building) that was off the layout and in need of TLC. Here's how work on that building progressed...
First, here's the building as I originally got it:
...and here's the original interior of the building:
...and the original roof:
Here's the building after some clean-up work. I removed the remnants of railing from the steps (used wire snippers), and sanded the "concrete" to give it a rougher texture.
Next, I prepped the roof for paint. In order to give it more of a textured tar paper look, I coated it with rows of masking tape:
Next, I masked the building so I could spray paint the interior. I learned (the hard way) that if you don't paint the interior of a building, you usually get the "amazing glowing building" effect (wherein your nicely detailed, scale building glows like a cheap plastic jack'o lantern when you light it).
Here it is painted silver. Advice I picked up on the forum was that silver works best, so I use silver
Here's the roof, painted gray and with "tar" lines added in black:
I tried a different mortar technique. Instead of using enamel, I painted in the grout using diluted white acrylic paint and wiped the excess away as I went. It seems to create more of a mess on the surface (vs. wiping off enamel or joint compound), so I'm probably doing it wrong:
Fully painted and light-proofed interior (I tested it by holding it up to the light in the garage - success!):
Exterior brick after the first round of scrubbing with steel wool:
Roof vents added. These ones are, of course, more fruit squeeze lids. I went with black this time, just for variety sake:
More clean-up of the brick - with a couple spots the need touch-up. Notice I also added a replacement handrail, made out of part of a Tichy fire escape:
Roof installed:
Here I've "weathered" the concrete foundation using some "aged concrete" color paint, and put some light weathering elsewhere on the building:
Added a business sign. It's a veterinary clinic:
LED lighting added to the inside:
...and an o-scale overhead light to go over the front door. These little lights are great, and this is one of the details that (IMO) makes all the difference:
Light installed:
...and a test lighting of the light! Looks good!
...all this building needs is a finishing touch or too. More to come...