The Miniatur Wunderland is touted as the largest model railway system in the world. I’m inclined to believe it. It’s currently running over 1,100 trains. The miniature city around it has a population of 290,000, which is a lot more than I can say for the capital of my state. Hell, it has 52 airplanes taking off and landing.
It’s only 24 years old, but it looks like people have been working on it forever. It’s a big tourist attraction in Hamburg, Germany, and I ever found myself in Hamburg, I’d certainly go see it. It’s got that wonderful vibe of obsession just short of mental illness that I love.
When I was a kid, miniature trains set in a landscape was still quite a thing for my parent’s generation. I saw many abandoned dioramas in various basements with trains in various stages of not working. Our generation loved slot cars, not trains, so grandad or dad couldn’t convince the next generation to keep pinching their fingers while assembling the tracks with those nasty, sharp little pins that aligned them.
Perhaps the concept has been abandoned long enough to get generally popular again, like so many hobbies. It’s slightly silly, but it’s also a lot of fun to look at. And before you even think about mocking the German robo-dweeb trying to get his Formula 1 miniatures to behave on his track, keep in mind that the founders of the Miniatur Wunderland all were awarded the Cross of Merit on Ribbon of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. When you’ve got one of those, then you can mock them, and not before.
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Today’s totally useless item:
Didja know Rod Stewart has one of the largest model train sets in the world? Large enough that he had to hire two guys to maintain it (one of them also cooks). Sort of took up one end of his house.
Hi Ed- Talk about things you’d never suspect. That about tops the list. I think he also collected Australian supermodels, which I would suspect.