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The entrance to the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory is all
decked out for Christmas
THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN HOLIDAY TRAIN SHOW
By Paul Olekson, (TTML Moderator)
According to the New York Botanical Garden brochure, the Enid
A. Haupt Conservatory is the largest Victorian Glass house in
the United States. It is sizeable with its over 42,000 square
foot interior.
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The conservatory is famous enough to have its own
replica |
Originally named The Crystal Palace, it opened in 1902 and is
now designated a New York City Historic Landmark. The iron and
glass building was inspired by London's Crystal Palace which
existed from 1854 to 1936. London's Crystal Palace was destroyed
by a spectacular fire after years of neglect. New York's Crystal
Palace was renamed the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory in honor of
the major benefactor for its 1993-1997 restoration.
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An Eggliner in a ladybug paint scheme zips
along weaving through the scenery
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The New York Botanical Garden Holiday Train Show is held in
the conservatory and has become a New York Christmas season tradition.
It was begun in 1992 and has attracted thousands of local New
Yorkers as well as local and international tourists.
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Look under the bridge and above the people's heads
and you will see two more bridges in the distance. This
really is a big train show |
The show is the creation of Paul G. Busse. The annual display
is revised and improved upon yearly by Mr. Busse and his team
at Applied Imagination, a company based in Alexandria, Ky.
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A tight crowd flows under the Hell Gate Bridge
while an RDC rolls overhead |
It was one of the first very cold days in New York when my son
and I visited this year. Upon entering the conservatory you are
confronted with near tropical heat and humidity. If you visit
on a cold day like we did and if you wear eye-glasses, expect
to take some time to step aside and clean the heavy frost off
your lenses!
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A Christmas train winds its way around the base
of the Brooklyn Bridge. If under the Brooklyn Bridge only
looked so good! |
A trolley crosses the famous Brooklyn Bridge |
The conservatory planners were wise in their arrangement of
the building. My son and I had been prepared to dash right up
to the trains and watch the action. The floor plan is such that
a visitor must walk through several wings and a tunnel before
reaching the trains. Of course, I am sure that no one ever had
a train show in mind when they built the place. Actually, it's
really nice and after we realized the trains were not to be seen
immediately, we calmed down and actually began to learn something
about plants. I believe there were other families in the crowd
having the same experience.
Along the route to the train display, we even saw plants bearing
coffee beans. By the time everyone reached the room that housed
the cactus, the air was filled with “oohs” and “aahs.” It is
quite interesting really to see cactus in the middle of frigid
cold Bronx, New York.
By
comparison, the only other “train show” I have ever been
to that seemed as crowded, is the Train Collectors Association
Eastern Division semi annual event in York, Pennsylvania. Not
that there were 14,000 people in the garden at one time, but
the conservatory itself was as full with people as any one hall
at the York fairgrounds. Beyond the TCA event, the crowd here
was a cross section of world culture. I heard accents unfamiliar
to even a cosmopolitan New Yorker . The place
was packed with children, grandparents, infants in strollers,
people in wheelchairs, there were truly children of all ages
from just about everywhere, and all were there to see the trains.
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The tower and ticket booths at Luna Park in Coney
Island |
I must confide that once in the wing of the conservatory that
housed the train display, I saw not one person interested in
any plants or the greater field of botany. The scenery and trains
combine to make an animated, unusual, and unexpected interpretation
of the sights and landmarks of New York. All the structures are
made of plant matter. Mr. Busse does not work from a blue print
according to an interview in a local newspaper. The G gauge garden
railroad trains loop around water falls, exotic plants, cross
high bridges over the publics' heads, and of course pass the
modeled famous landmarks of New York. The display itself occupies
an amazing 6000 square feet. There are 140 replicas including
the Statue of Liberty, Hell Gate Bridge, Apollo Theater, Saks
Fifth Avenue, Radio City Music Hall, Rockefeller Center, Brooklyn
Bridge, Grand Central Terminal, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Guggenheim
Museum, St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the new center of attraction
this year - the 1923 Yankee Stadium. There are also recreations
of famous sites from around the metropolitan area such as Van
Cortlandt Manor and the Rockefeller estate known as Kykuit.
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A Christmas Trolley arriving
at the Apollo Theater ca 1913 |
Each structure is handcrafted from a limitless variety of natural
materials such as willow twigs, acorn tops, eucalyptus leaves,
juniper berries, poppy pods, maple seeds, honeysuckle, hickory
nuts, and bamboo just to name a few.
Each replica takes a work group of eight people several months
to complete. They are built in Kentucky and shipped to New York
by truck. Busse and his crew arrive at the Botanical Garden ten
days prior to the show's opening. In those ten days they build
the display, add the new structures, and also repair and update
older ones that are stored at the Botanical Garden all year.
There is a decided Victorian and post Victorian flavor to the
buildings and structures. Busse relates in an interview that
the cinnamon stick makes the best Victorian trim. He called them
the “perfect medium.” After each piece is built and finished,
it is soaked in urethane in order to preserve it.
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Statue of Liberty and N.Y. City Hall |
The trains vary in manufacture from Aristo-Craft, LGB, and others.
The very first layout as you enter the display area is elevated
about three feet off the floor and all who enter are greeted
by a sleek New York Central streamlined passenger train. Overhead
run various trains including an RDC, an Amtrak Genesis locomotive
with a Home Depot logo, and a trolley. Down low at grass and
kid level run fast steam freights, a circus train, a streetcar,
and several Christmas trains.
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Arriving visitors are greated by a pair of New
York Central Alcos pulling an Amtrak streamliner on an
elevated figure 8 layout |
The most impressive of all to me was my son's delight at the
toy train action. He was down on the floor keeping an eye on
all the motion. I can assure you he wasn't alone. The trains
riveted the attention of everyone there. I was happy to have
brought him to a place that he could connect to. This being a
famous location and a New York holiday event that also had trains,
made it not just another one of “daddy's train shows.” This is
an important and valuable holiday event. How awesome to see the
large amount of visitors, the eager families, and the exposure
of excited people to toy trains.
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Some famous New York town houses with front door
train service |
RESOURCES:
http://www.buffalogardens.com/historical/Crystal_Palaces/body_crystal_palaces.html
http://www.frommers.com/destinations/newyorkcity/A24066.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crystal_Palace#See_also
“The Journal News / Life and Style”; Mary Shustack; November
17, 2005
http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051117/LIFESTYLE0
http://www.nybg.org/train_show05.php
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The conservatory is huge. Jonathan hams it up in
front of just about 25% of the building |
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