A couple of months ago I wrote a simplified description of my ideas provided to a friend who wants to build a switching layout, and asked me for some input. Not being a layout design guy, I really just stole some ideas from the Model Railroader articles about their Beer Line project layout (see that post at: https://modelingthesp.blogspot.com/2026/03/designing-switching-layout.html ).
But while writing that post, it came back to me that I’d undertaken something similar, some years ago, for an acquaintance (who’s now deceased) about a different switching layout. Sure enough, digging through old file folders, I found some of the material I generated at that time. His idea was to model a switching district on an island, to make its compactness logical, and provide a marine theme. He wanted to call it Pratt Island.
Much of his inspiration for these ideas had come from the excellent Andy Sperandeo article in Model Railroad Planning 2014, pages 24–29, about Santa Fe’s Alice Street Yard in Oakland, Calif. (That issue, incidentally, contained quite a few insights for switching layouts.) Alice Street was on the mainland, not an island, but the compactly arranged trackage and industries were things he liked. Below is the prototype area, adopted by MR from a map by John Signor.
You may note that there is no continuous running in this track arrangement, and only a single interchange (with the SP), so that most traffic in and out is via the ferry slip at bottom.My acquaintance realized that one valuable aspect of the island format is that arriving and departing freight cars would come by ferry or bridge, eliminating the need for any mainline trackage. Obviously a ferry “cassette” to bring cars to and from the island could work, though that implied a ferry slip, which he didn’t find interesting. He leaned toward a bridge, of which he might only need to model the extreme end.
A one point in our discussion, I asked him, “Why the name ‘Pratt’ for the location?” He got a mischievous grin on his face, and said that an industry he wanted to model was a steel fabricator, and naturally wanted to name it, “Pratt Fabrication and Truss.” I tried not to say I was sorry I asked. Actually, I think his real reason is that it was a short name, making waybills easier to fill out.
On the topic of industries, I had given him the same list I used in my other switching layout design (see the link in the first paragraph at the top of this post). That list includes a fuel dealer, a wholesale grocer, a freight house, perhaps a cannery of some kind, very versatile industries such as warehouses, and the great “universal industry,” the team track. Each can receive a wide variety of cargoes and freight car types.
He mentioned that he had a lot of models of a car type he liked, 50-foot double-door automobile cars, and I suggested he include a dock for unloading such cars (and 40-foot double-door cars as well). I’ve discussed that option before (at: https://modelingthesp.blogspot.com/2018/01/auto-industry-traffic-part-4-model-cars.html ), and below I reproduce a photo from that post. It shows 1953 Chevrolet Bel Air sedans being unloaded in Portland, an Allen DeLay photo from the Portland Oregonian newspaper. Obviously all that is really needed is a timber platform, level with the car doors.
So I know he considered the ideas I suggested, and sketched some long, narrow track plans (recognizing that the primary element necessary in a switching layout is a run-around,so pencil that in first). I urged him to include streets throughout the layout area, and reminded him that you can label them on the fascia, as on the view below looking up Bromela Road in Ballard on my layout.
So those are some of the suggestions I made (as well as I can tell from my surviving notes and sketches). I suppose most of them are really points that could apply to any layout design, not just for a switching layout.
Tony Thompson


























