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Minories is a 'deceptively simple' design for a model railway layout, designed by C. J. Freezer. The design was first published in ''Railway Modeller'' in 1957 and it became a regular of
Peco PECO is a UK-based manufacturer of model railway accessories, especially trackwork, based at Pecorama, Beer in South Devon, England. PECO is the collective name for the Pritchard Patent Product Company Ltd, Peco Publications and Publicity L ...
's many collected plans books afterwards. It is notable as an influential design, more than as a single instance of the model. The design was an attempt to model an interesting urban passenger terminus in the minimum space, allowing much opportunity for operating trains, rather than scenic modelling. Freezer was the editor of ''
Railway Modeller ''Railway Modeller'' is a monthly British magazine about model railways now published by Peco Publications in Beer, Devon. It has been in publication since 1949 with Vol. 1 No. 1 published as The Railway Modeller, being an Ian Allan Production ...
'' and Minories, with its developments, made regular appearances throughout the years.


Prototype

Its inspiration was the
Metropolitan Railway The Metropolitan Railway (also known as the Met) was a passenger and goods railway that served London from 1863 to 1933, its main line heading north-west from the capital's financial heart in the City to what were to become the Middlesex su ...
low-level platforms within
Liverpool Street station Liverpool Street station, also known as London Liverpool Street, is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station in the north-eastern corner of the City of London, in the ward of Bishopsgate Without. It is the t ...
in London, although re-cast as a terminus. This station was set within a deep cutting in a dense urban environment. Similar station sites could be found in many UK cities. Although primarily a passenger station, such stations commonly also had a
bay platform In the United Kingdom and in Australia, a bay platform is a dead-end railway platform at a railway station that has through lines. It is normal for bay platforms to be shorter than their associated through platforms. Overview Bay and islan ...
for parcels, newspaper or mail traffic. In the steam era a small terminus would also have facilities for changing and possibly watering locomotives. Trains would be hauled in by one locomotive that would then be uncoupled but remain trapped in the end of the platform line until the train departed in the opposite direction, hauled away by a fresh locomotive. The main locomotive depot would be at a suburban distance, to save on expensive city centre land. As
tender locomotive A tender or coal-car (US only) is a special rail vehicle hauled by a steam locomotive containing its fuel (wood, coal, oil or torrefied biomass) and water. Steam locomotives consume large quantities of water compared to the quantity of fuel, so ...
s avoid running backwards where possible, mid-size termini may have a small turntable as well, but coaling and ash-dropping would still be elsewhere. There may also be a small spur for a
station pilot A switcher, shunter, yard pilot, switch engine, yard goat, or shifter is a small railroad locomotive used for manoeuvring railroad cars inside a rail yard in a process known as ''switching'' (US) or ''shunting'' (UK). Switchers are not inten ...
loco; which moved rakes of empty coaching stock to and from carriage sidings elsewhere, as needed to cope with extra
rush hour A rush hour (American English, British English) or peak hour (Australian English) is a part of the day during which traffic congestion on roads and crowding on public transport is at its highest. Normally, this happens twice every weekday: on ...
traffic.


Model

The purpose of the model was to provide a passenger terminus with opportunities for interesting operation of trains. It was also to fit within a small space, and to fold away even smaller for storage. A double track entry by tunnel led to three terminal platforms. Further spurs were provided as a bay platform for parcels and a short one for a station pilot locomotive. All pointwork was grouped together in the station throat, switching between the main running lines and platforms being by two
crossover Crossover may refer to: Entertainment Albums and songs * ''Cross Over'' (Dan Peek album) * ''Crossover'' (Dirty Rotten Imbeciles album), 1987 * ''Crossover'' (Intrigue album) * ''Crossover'' (Hitomi Shimatani album) * ''Crossover'' (Yoshino ...
s: one facing, one trailing. As a model, the layout took many features of the urban original and turned them to its advantage. The low-level urban setting of the Metropolitan was surrounded by a
retaining wall Retaining walls are relatively rigid walls used for supporting soil laterally so that it can be retained at different levels on the two sides. Retaining walls are structures designed to restrain soil to a slope that it would not naturally keep to ...
which provided an obvious scenic break to the model. It also justified the popular, but sometimes contrived, technique of a tunnel exit to the off-board
fiddle yard A fiddle yard or staging yard is a collection of model railway tracks that are hidden from view and allow trains to be stored and manipulated by the operators. These tracks are used to allow most model railways to be operated in a realistic manner. ...
. Fiddle yards, and their use for the "Fiddle Yard to Terminus" layout, were themselves a technique earlier popularised by Freezer. British railway modelling of this period was almost entirely OO gauge. Typical small model railways were based on a notional GWR rustic branch line terminus, with small locomotives and sparse timetables. Minories was an opportunity to model the more vibrant urban traffic, but without requiring a great deal of space. Choosing a terminus instead of through platforms allowed a major space saving, as the layout no longer required a room-filling large radius running loop as well. The original Minories layout was in size, with the fiddle yard additional to this. It folded in half lengthwise, using a removable girder road bridge to hide the hinges. A two-section folding baseboard was an obvious plan for a layout, as the sections could fold in on themselves to make a protected storage box. However this also required the hinges to be above 'ground level' to allow height for buildings etc., usually difficult to achieve for rural scenes, but easily done here with the retaining wall and bridge. Minories packed a great deal into its small space. The cutting location gave a plausible excuse to fill every inch of the baseboard with trains and the assumption of an exit via cut-and-cover lines also explained the abrupt scenic break. Lines from the platforms exited via a pair of facing and trailing crossovers that allowed access from both running lines to any of the platforms, despite only using six or seven sets of points. By curving these lines around obstacles such as a signal box, the visual impression was also given of a far longer running space. Another of the subtle technical benefits of the design was that all of the pointwork was concentrated on one folding baseboard, the other merely being the platform lengths. This simplified their operation, especially in the early days when electric
point motor A point machine (also known as a point motor, switch machine or switch motor) is a device for operating railway turnouts especially at a distance. Overview In the earliest times, points were operated manually by levers. Gradually, these were cen ...
s were rare and remote operation of points would be done by the mechanical wire-in-tube method, which could not cross the baseboard hinge. One feature it did not have was the otherwise ubiquitous run-round loop, a staple of the rural branch line model. This meant that arriving locos were trapped in the platform ends until released by another. Requiring two working locos was not a problem for a busy urban station and it was a virtue to the modeller looking for excuses to run more stock in less space. It was contrary to rustic working though and the '
one engine in steam In railway signalling, a token is a physical object which a train driver is required to have or see before entering onto a particular section of single track. The token is clearly endorsed with the names of the section it belongs to. A token sys ...
' principle. For this reason Minories was rarely modeled in
00-9 OO9, often also denoted as 009 or 00-9 is a model railway scale and gauge combination of 4 mm scale and gauge tracks, which models a prototype track gauge of . It is a common choice in the United Kingdom for the modelling of narrow-gauge ...
or other narrow gauge scales. The layout design has been modelled in many eras, from the original mid-20th century steam period back to the early days of the Victorian underground Metropolitan Railway and to the modern era of multiple unit working. In 2007 the Diesel and Electric Modellers United (DEMU) ran a small layout competition to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the plan's publication. The competition was to build and exhibit a layout based on the Minories trackplan and was judged by Cyril's son Nick. A number of exceptionally high quality layouts were entered including "Ripper Street", "Minories GN" and "Westonmouth Central". The winner was eventually chosen as "Birmingham Moor Street" by the Scalefour Society WMAG.


See also

* List of notable model railways


References

{{Reflist, colwidth=35em, refs= {{Cite news , title=Cyril Freezer , newspaper=
The Telegraph ''The Telegraph'', ''Daily Telegraph'', ''Sunday Telegraph'' and other variant names are popular names for newspapers. Newspapers with these titles include: Australia * ''The Telegraph'' (Adelaide), a newspaper in Adelaide, South Australia, publ ...
, date=12 June 2009 , url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/technology-obituaries/5517020/Cyril-Freezer.html
{{Cite web , title=C J Freezer , author=Carl Arendt , url=http://www.carendt.com/small-layout-scrapbook/page-85b-may-2009/ {{Cite web , title=Minories , website=The Model Railway Club , url=http://www.themodelrailwayclub.org/layouts/minories {{Cite web , title=Minories, isometric view , website=RMWeb , url=http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cqP72O35CNs/TdYIYi3cuLI/AAAAAAAABVw/gRT_1vbACK4/s1600/Minories+-+close+up.JPG {{Cite web , title=Ripper Street , website=RMWeb , url=http://www.rmweb.co.uk/forumimages/DEMU/Ripper3.jpg {{Cite web , title= CJFs' Minories , date=17 June 2009 , website=Model Rail Forum , url=http://www.modelrailforum.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=9183&st=0&p=93499&#entry93499 {{Cite web , title= CJFs' Minories , date=17 June 2009 , website=Model Rail Forum , url=http://www.modelrailforum.com/forums/index.php?s=&showtopic=9183&view=findpost&p=93528 {{Cite book , title=60 Plans for Small Railways , author=C. J. Freezer , author-link=C. J. Freezer , origyear=1958 , edition=3rd , year=1971 , publisher= PECO Publications , pages=31–33 Model railroads