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Our Lady of San Beattadaise Cathedral sits on the highest point of my layout - a hilltop overlooking both uptown and downtown.  It is the church of Metropolitan Archbishop Kiril Lakota (Anthony Quinn’s character in Shoes of the Fisherman, my favorite movie).  That is his Metropolitan parked out front (Sorry, I could not resist the pun). 

 

I recognize the irony of having a cathedral with shelves of tanks right behind it, and am thinking of covering those shelves with a sky blue removable backdrop. 

 

The building 25.5 inches long, 14.25 inches wide, and 20.75 inches high.  It was made from four bashed Pegasus Gothic City Building kits, two Large Set #1 and two Small Set #2, and required every panel in all four sets, save one.  The round stained glass window section is the only non-Pegasus wall panel – it is a left over and custom-fit Ameritown brick wall panel with a 2 1/8 inch hole cut into it and a scratch styrene brick border put around that.  Roof is just Plastruct sheets cut to fit and glued.  Bell towers have a total of ten bells.  Windows are flexible clear plastic (page liners). 

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My 'Streets country road loops around the cathedral before, now as the other lane, heading back to the other end of the layout.  You see a lot of 'Streets in this picture because there is a lot on my layout. 

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Lee...this is your best work as far as buildings go.  I had looked at these sets way back when AMCDave was working on his project.  I am now convinced that I will be using these sets combining them with some Exin castle kits to build a cathedral for my downtown area.  Looks like a skyscraper or two may be sacrificed!!

 

Alan

Originally Posted by AMCDave:

WOW!!!! You agin make me feel bad I've dragged my feet on mine so bad!!!! How about some details???  Did you cut each window individually? Or one big sheet?? What are the inlaid statues on the blank wall sections??? Figures thinned?? What kind of figures?? THANKS....nice work!

Each panel's set of three arched windows is a separate pane: cut to the right dimensions they slip in a recess in the panel nicely.  I then used Gorilla tape to cover their edges and hold them in place.

The figures "carved" into the building - supposed to be depictions of saints - are JTT unpainted plastic figures with the back side filed flat and glued to the panel. I filled gaps around them with a bead of Elmers glue and when that dried just painted them. 

Originally Posted by Scrapiron Scher:

Lee, I take back everything I have said about you as a Legacy "Refuser."

That is amazingly cool.

 

NOW . . . . . . 

 

You must have a hunchback, gargoyles and a beautiful woman.

 

I will do the recording of the hunchback saying in a thick, raspy British accent :

 

" Ohhhhhhhhhh, That I were only made of stone, like you. "

Haha, also some gothic organ music would be great. Well done Lee, very impressive.

Originally Posted by Tom Densel:

Lee,

 

If you are going to detail the interior, maybe I can help.

 

DSC08184

 

Tom

Nice building, and appropriate - pipe organ builders.

 

You got me thinking: it would be fun to build a miniature scale pipe organ and church interior.  I didn't, and won't in this case, because this church is in the most isolated portion of the layout - at least four plus feet from any edge of the layout where people stand to look at it.  The building is actually atop a lift out hatch I get to via a really irksome duck under (actually, a crawl under).  So you can't see anything through the windows normally.

Originally Posted by coloradohirailer:

At the beginning, I thought this was a kit...it is a really nice scratchbuild, and all the

more impressive.

Its not purely scratch - but not quite just a bashed kit, either.  I used 42 panels from various Pegasus Gothic City building kits - all modified and filled and filed, yes, and 21 JTT figures for the "saints" carved into the walls.  Roof, windows etc., are scratch. 

 

This was a lot of fun to build. So much so that I plan a archdiocese residence (archbishop's home) to go behind it, that will have a triangular footprint about 12 x 9 x 15 and be seven or eight inches high. 

Lee;

Truly Amazing !

I love the pun with the car, not that I would recognize it. And more wars have been fought over religion than anything else, the tanks in background are actually appropriate in a way.

While something like that is way out of normal for the area I'm modeling I must admit to considering it. Not that big But still...

 

Just Amazing, Impressive, WOW....

Originally Posted by Lee Willis:

Our Lady of San Beattadaise Cathedral sits on the highest point of my layout - a hilltop overlooking both uptown and downtown.  It is the church of Metropolitan Archbishop Kiril Lakota (Anthony Quinn’s character in Shoes of the Fisherman, my favorite movie).  That is his Metropolitan parked out front (Sorry, I could not resist the pun). 

 

I recognize the irony of having a cathedral with shelves of tanks right behind it, and am thinking of covering those shelves with a sky blue removable backdrop. 

 

The building 25.5 inches long, 14.25 inches wide, and 20.75 inches high.  It was made from four bashed Pegasus Gothic City Building kits, two Large Set #1 and two Small Set #2, and required every panel in all four sets, save one.  The round stained glass window section is the only non-Pegasus wall panel – it is a left over and custom-fit Ameritown brick wall panel with a 2 1/8 inch hole cut into it and a scratch styrene brick border put around that.  Roof is just Plastruct sheets cut to fit and glued.  Bell towers have a total of ten bells.  Windows are flexible clear plastic (page liners). 

Slide1

Slide2

 

My 'Streets country road loops around the cathedral before, now as the other lane, heading back to the other end of the layout.  You see a lot of 'Streets in this picture because there is a lot on my layout. 

Slide3

Cool!

Post

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