Recently Art posted about needing an odd shaped building to fill a specific space on his layout. His solution was to take a building front, and expand it using Masonite sections, then just apply brick material to the blank wall.
That gave me an idea! I need a lot grain elevators and a couple mills which are models of specific structures, for my layout. Armed only with an image from Google Earth, I set to work.
The first thing I needed to do was some math, to get a rough idea of the size of the windows, and the height and width of the facade. I came up with 15' foot segments center to center on the pilasters, and windows that were 3' wide by 6' high.
Using my table saw, I cut 1/8" Masonite into strips 1-1/2" and 3/4" and lopped them off to the height of the wall. I laid the strips out on the table in the alternating pattern of the building.
I set up two long strips of Masonite to form a square on the table top and put down wax paper, to keep the glue from sticking. Following the window pattern on the picture, I cut small pieces from the 3/4" stock to define the window tops and bottoms, and simply edge glued everything together.
Construction progressed until I reached the end of the top piece of wax paper. I had been fighting with it all afternoon, when I got a much better idea.
So I flipped it over for a minute, and glued long strips going the other way. It was pretty strong before that, but it wasn't coming apart after that.
I flipped it back over and continued to the end, not worrying about it sticking, because it was raised up off the table.
I'm very pleased with the way it turned out. It was the solution to a huge problem. This is only the first element in a much larger project. I will add the glass and brick later. This was fun and easy. Not sure why I started with one of the largest and most complicated ones, but it does prove the theory is sound.
Give it a try, you're only limited by your imagination!