Showing posts with label train show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label train show. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2013

New York Botanical Garden's Holiday Train Show - Model Trains and Botanical Architecture

One of New York's popular family holiday traditions is the New York Botanical Garden's Holiday Train Show. It features model trains running along a half-mile of track in and around New York landmark buildings and bridges constructed entirely of plant materials including nuts, tree bark, fruits, pine cones, and leaves. The display is being held at the historic, Victorian-era Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. The botanical architecture includes replicas of St. Patrick's Cathedral, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the original Yankee Stadium, the Statue of Liberty, and the Brooklyn Bridge, among others. The Holiday Train Show runs through January 12, 2014.

Monday, November 26, 2012

2012 Grand Central Holiday Train Show at the NY Transit Museum Gallery Annex and Store



A replica of Grand Central Terminal, which turns 100 in 2013, is the centerpiece of the brand new layout of this year's Holiday Train Show at the New York Transit Museum Gallery Annex and Store at Grand Central Terminal. The 11th Annual Holiday train Show features model Metro-North and New York Central trains departing from a miniature Grand Central Terminal on a 34' long two level "O" gauge layout. Vintage model trains from the Museum's collection and New York Central Railroad posters from the 1920s – 1940s are also on display. There are also miniature cars, taxis, police cars, buses, gas station  and houses. The show continues to delight young and adult visitors alike. It runs through February 10 next year.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

2012 Holiday Train Show: Model Trains and New York Landmark Replicas Made of Natural Plant Materials

St. Patrick's Cathedral
Statue of Liberty
Ellis Island Immigration Museum
The New York Public Library
Washington Square Arch
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Penn Station
New York Stock Exchange, Rockefeller Center
Yankee Stadium
Conservatory, New York Botanical Garden
The Apollo
Brooklyn Bridge
The Dairy, Central Park
Roosevelr Island Tram
Macy's at Herald Square
Yesterday, the delightful annual holiday train show opened at the New York Botanical Garden's Enid A. Haupt Conservatory in the Bronx. The Conservatory, the nation's largest Victorian glasshouse, showcases large scale model trains and more than 140 scaled iconic buildings and structures in New York under thousands of twinkling lights. Artistically crafted by Paul Busse's team at Applied Imagination, the landmarks are made of natural materials from plants such as bark, twigs, stems, fruits, seeds, and pine cones. The exhibit begins with replicas of the Statue of Liberty and the Ellis Island Immigration Museum installed at the reflecting pool. Behind the Statue of Liberty are cute replicas of the Roosevelt Island tram cars. The other structures included in the exhibit are the original Penn Station and Yankee Stadium, Radio City Music Hall, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, The New York Public Library on 42nd Street, and the Brooklyn Bridge. The model trains inlude late-1800s American steam engines and streetcars travel alongside modern freight and high-speed passenger trains and trolleys. Cable cars travel over the Conservatory’s reflecting pool. Even Thomas the Tank Engine™ joins the fleets, which traverse across rustic bridges, along overhead trestles, through tunnels, and past waterfalls that cascade into flowing creeks.


The Artist’s Studio shows how the replicas are constructed and displays models in varying stages of completion, from the framing of the landmark structures to the addition of plant part details such as magnolia leaf roof shingles and radish seed marquee lights. The Artist’s Studio features two botanically inspired trolleys and a train, each running on their own separate tracks. Also in The Artist's Studio are replicas of national and international sites and landmarks.

The newest addition this year is a replica of Macy’s flagship store which is on display near the entrance to the Haupt Conservatory.