Here are my Ameritowne. I have abought eight buildings made prior to these that are not on the layout now, stored somewhere, I think under the layout. Here are all on the layout now. I love Ameri-towne.
I don't have an entirely stock kit on the layout. This Harley Davidson dealership is the closest: stock except it has storefront windows on two sides . . . LED lighting added about two years after I put it on the layout.
Widening a building is easy with Ameritown panels although it requires good attention to detail, as here. This is five rather than three windows wide, and required multiple cuts - much more complicated than just grafted together part of one panel to another. This is usually the case when you need to BOTH maintain the even windows spacing in the upper floors and make the first floor spacing also even/symetrical/as you want it, as here.
Here are some building fronts (there is no building depth here, with a 'Streets road running right behind them) along Detective avenue, all custom built to be winder or different to fit very specific spaces andf have the look I wanted. From Left to right in the photo are the Thin Man bar, 221B Baker street (from the Jeremy Brett series), Albert Campions townhouse, and the Bottle Street Police station. Quite easy with Ameri-towne fronts, etc.
Nero Wolfe's townhouse with its bay or bow window (I'm not going to get into an argument about what the difference between the two is - its cool whatever) is a bit more complex. I botched a couple of panels before getting the hang of making these. But it was worth it: nice, difference, real look. At my best, when I cut these miter edges, there are small gaps between the edges. Once the plastic cement is hardened, I fill them with yellow glue, which is a great gap filled. Once painted, you can't see the gap . . .
The building with the turret (PVC pipe) was one of the first bashing projects I did with Ameritowne, because i wanted to do a turret.
The six story high building was more complex to build than one might thing. A bit has to be trimmed off the top panels to keep the windows evenly spaced along the front, and the lower floors were assembled from pieces to provide the custom-spacing need for a revolving door in the middle of the front.
After learning how to do that miter work on Wolfe's house I wanted to put it to work again, eventually. The Imperial Hotel is under construction as you can see. It has some sort of "bay window" complexity at each corner, and is really more of a triangular rather than square side: although it has four sides one is only two windows wide and one seven, etc.
This single story train station didn't take that many panels and with this look looks like something other than Ameritowne, at least to me . . . custom made, stratch-build roof has the corner overhang cut off so trains have clearance as they pass close by.