I was wishing my father was alive to see this. I'm 72, back in the 1950's, he filled the basement with a large layout, including bridges, mountains, turntable and roundhouse, all made in his cabinet shop, in his spare time. He was a mill-shop foreman at the local lumberyard during the day. Thanks so much for posting this wonderful video!!
wow, thanks for sharing that. My uncle had a layout in his loft ( i was about 5 at the time) and ever since seeing it i have wanted to build one. His also had ho scale slot cars on it, it may have been minic motor ways but i cannot recall, was many years ago. Now our child has grown up and moved out i am starting to collect bits for my own...
I had an Uncle Bob Schuh in Buffalo, NY that did the same thing... It all started when he built a small room on the back of the house for the washer/dryer/water heater, so he could claim the entire basement of his HUGE North Buffalo home for his model railroad... 40 years later, the train layout still wasn't finished, but quite impressive, nonetheless... He also owned a pattern/cabinet shop and WNY's best model train hobby shop, KVAL Hobbies... His was the GOTO model train shop for 100's of patrons for 6 counties around, plus Ontario... Unfortunately, my Uncle Bob passed away a couple years ago, well into his 80's... Any body who knew Bob Schuh or shopped at KVAL Hobbies is welcome to reply to me... Thanx...
@@cschuh4695 Most model railroad layouts are never finished. As they near completion, we decide to expand. Or, as our skill level increases, we become dissatisfied with our earlier efforts so we decide to redo. The layout becomes progressively more intricate and impressive. The fun is in the building, not the operation and maintenance.
My dad did the same thing, but in the 1990's. I'm in my 40's now and preparing to build my own. I just put up a 48x64 foot pole parn with 18' ceilings to house it and I'm using HO scale. It is to be my retirement projsect although I'll be working it as soon as I can. It was his dad who got him into it and now I'm on the same path. I hope model railroading never goes the way of the dinosaur.
I cannot believe Bruce was willing to sell the building for warehouse space after he put a tremendous amount of money, effort, passion, and especially time into this model railway. I’m glad the new owners are taking care of his work, I will have to see it someday! Great video as always!
Unfortunately folks are having to part with their creations, treasures and even homes anymore, due to today's expenses. I pray that this was not his situation! The new owner sure scored a treasure!
I'm assuming this gentleman started this hobby project after retirement. So if he started when he was in his 60s, he could've been in his 90s around 2019 when he sold. So, at that age, he might have had ailing health and might have even had medical expenses rising to where he had to re-evaluate his priorities. When you're 90 years old and having to decide to move into an assisted living facility, that $1,000,000 building might be your only ticket into a nicer living location. It's sad, but it's life.
@@RichardHartness Bruce started this journey into model railroading in the basement of his home when he lived in the Three Bridges area of NJ. As his home was being built he excavated extra basements for the layout. It was pretty much an individual effort except for when they had an open house around the Holidays. The local fire department was the beneficiary of any donations that were made. I'm talking back 40+ years ago or so. People moved into the area and complained so Bruce looked for someplace to go and that's when Northlandz happened. A lot of the bridges you see here are direct transplants from that basement layout. THAT particular setup occupied 5 total basements under his house before he moved - all HO. The gentleman's full name is Bruce Williams Zaccagnino.
Reminds me of Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg Germany. Whenever you're back in Europe, I highly encourage you to visit it. It WILL blow your mind. The level of detail and automation is just incredible.
I am sitting here planning a two-moth EV roadtrip from Stockholm to Portugal and back in Autumn 2024. Hamburg is damn near unavoidable. Thus, I thank you and have added it to the ever-growing list.
Grew up just outside of Flemington and spent so many hours here. I don't exaggerate that to me it was better than DisneyWorld. Thank you for bringing some spotlight on this beautiful place.
My grandfather had an N scale model train layout that took up about a third of the basement. He had it walled off, and all the buildings had lights in it so when he turned off the main light in the room and turn the lights on all the buildings, it look like a small town. It was one of the most amazing and beautiful things I ever saw.
My grandfather always loved trains but as a young orphan in west Germany during the 50s he couldn’t afford any. Fast forward 20 years or so later after gaining citizenship and a free ticket to Vietnam upon coming home he finally started a collection of all the German trains he never could afford as a child. I’m glad that I have them now to remember him with. I hope to have them up and running sometime this year. They meant a lot to him & they certainly mean a lot to me too. Thanks for making this video.
I'm from this county! I had at least 4 of my childhood birthday parties there. 24 years old now and super relieved to see that this place full of personal memories is still alive and well. Will have to take a trip back up there to see it again
As a cartoon caracaturist I really appreciate this level of detail. I bet I could hours and hours just soaking this in, in the flesh, so to speak. When I was a child in the 60's my parents took me and my brothers to a miniature world here in the UK. We felt like giants there, but it was nowhere near the scale of this place.
I am totally blown away by the scale of NorthlandZ and all the hours and attention to detail it took to build it. Especially the attention to detail. Those bridges look like they were built with not-quite-toothpicks, but pretty close. It's hard to imagine building just one of those intricate bridges, let alone 400 of them (I think you said). I pray the area never has an earthquake. Thanks for showing this and thanks to Jim for allowing you to document it. Without it, few would know of its existence.
Made the trek here with the family in the early 2000s when Bruce Williams was still very hands-on with this place, what an interesting guy! he even took us for a ride on the outdoor railway on the property, and gave an organ recital in the theater there! So happy to see that this place still exists.
Been there many times when I used to live in NJ. It is an incredible place to visit. It is great that someone with a passion for trains purchased the property and saved it from becoming a statistic like Roadside America in Shartlesville, PA did. The story of Grandma who owns the house in the middle of the mine is a running story throughout Northlandz. She apparently is quite rich and owns lots of property throughout Northlandz.
When this attraction opened in '96, I lived only about a 25 minute drive away. Would take my house guests over here to see the layout. It was impressive then and remains so!
As a TCA member & collector ( HO & O scale )since 2000 this is by far the most impressive layout I have ever seen. One can not wrap their head around the time consumption & visualization of building this enormous layout 👍🇺🇸
Reminds me of the guy that built the B-29 homebuilt aircraft. Some guys have a vision and just take it to a whole-nother level. Driven is where they start then it rolls into driven obsession.
Incredible! I see it, but I still can't believe it! I remember when I was a kid, my friend's dad had his entire basement filled with model trains and things like this. Needless to say, it was nothing compared to this!
I think the message here is. Kick ass paying attention to details in modeling made the world smaller before tech. Both take talent. Thanks for the ride❤
I’ll bet that Bruce decided to leave his obsession behind him and decided to go travel or do anything not in this building. Lots of hours spent there and a lot to show for it. Very cool he could move on. Even more cool that the person who bought the building saw the value of his work. Great Video!!!
My mind is blown on so many levels! First of all the amount of details is mind blowing! Pretty much every angle tops the one before. Then that it was built by one man! Then after putting all this work into this amazingly detailed art, he was willing to let it go. Thank you for the detailed video! I'm surprised that i never heard about this place. Wish i had a chance to see it in person!
It looks better now, than it was when I visited about a decade ago. I first visited back in the early 2000's and it was awesome. I went back a decade later and it was run down with big holes in the scenery and broken structures and only a few 2 or 3 car trains running. What a disappointment my second visit was. I'm happy to see it has been restored and in operation.
Some commenters compare this layout with the miniatur-wunderland in Hamburg. I think it is something very different. The one in Hamburg was aimed from the very start to be the largest Model-Landscape in the World. No matter at what cost, no matter how many people have to work on it. THIS however is one man realizing his dreamworld all by himself. And you can see that it's done by one artist alone. There is a certain "handwriting" to it. You can clearly see that he adored building bridges! Sure, the one in Hamburg is on a much higher level of proficiency. But this has character. This is art.
My grandmother took me here as a child and man was it paradise… still is frankly. I need to go back, this place is a treasure and must be protected at all costs. Additionally a documentary should really be made.
That was really a piece of art. So much detail it must have been fun for him. It kind of reminded me of the hills of West Virginia. Thanks for showing us. 💞🚆
Wow, what a great video Chris! You cover everything, from graveyards to Kensington to the largest model railroad layout in the world! I live in Pennsylvania, about 60 miles away from Flemington, and definitely have to check this place out. I'm a huge railroad fan, both real and model, and was amazed also at the recreation of Harpers Ferry, WV, of which I have been through on Amtrak. Thanks for posting this!
Went to Northlantz back in like 2018 or 2019 and got to meet Bruce. Very nice guy. He was right at the front, with this little half-open office full of cameras all over the layout. Glad to see the place is in good shape! I will say this. The new owners have a better taste in trains. When I saw it, the trains were shorter and only had F-unit locomotives. Good to see longer trains with more variety.
SIMPLY AMAZING!!!! THERE ARE NO WOEDS FOR THIS ,,,,,THIS ,,,,,THIS CAN'T EVEN CAN'T EVEN CALL IT A TRAIN SET. A MARVELOUS WORK OR ART AND ESPECIALLY LOVE. GREAT JOB !
This is one of the most incredible pieces of art I have ever seen with exception of my better half. She is still to me one of the most incredible pieces of art ever made. Gods masterpiece !! I would love to see this someday. It is now on my bucket list thank you for this video.
I generally hope that this amazing layoutvwill be kept for many years to come and even generations so more and more people can get to view snd enjoy this wonderful layout for future generation's to enjoy 😊
Wow! I built my own- 60 locos, 100 coaches, 200 wagons, 300 ft track , mountains tunnels, river, bridges , roads, buildings , 8 controllers, sidings, plus more .That was big enough - sold the lot n moved to Spain. Miss em now 😢.Took 45 yrs. total collecting
There really isn't that much to the control room besides looks, its more or less a very impressive shelf for all the power packs. Besides the small square amp and volt meters above each packs the rest is just for show
No words!! Very Impressive! I don't even want to think about how you maintain something like this. Cleaning tracks, dusting off the models, getting to a stuck train on a bridge! An amazing layout.
Looks like HO scale, my favorite scale for trains. They look the most realistic. When the scale gets bigger you have that center 3rd rail which kills the "scale" part of it. When I was 9-10 years old in the 1980's my dad built me a killer HO scale layout. It was roughly 12 feet by 8 feet with two tracks (can run two trains at once) and was highly detailed with streets, buildings, houses, cars and even working lights in every building. There was even a Kentucky Fried Chicken. The RR crossing gates would lower when the trains approached the road. And amazingly he built it without me knowing it. He made it so it could fold up into the wall of our "play room" and when folded up all you saw was a large rectangle gap in the paneling on the wall. I thought nothing of it at my age. He would work on it when I was asleep at night or if he had a day off work while I was at school. Took him 6 months and he unveiled it one Christmas morning. The way he surprised me was when I opened some presents on Christmas morning and they were trains, HO scale locomotive and 10 rail cars. I was confused until he tole me to go in the play room where the layout was folded down and all the lights lit up in the houses. LOL. I thought that was impressive and it was. But the layout in this video is in a league of it's own. Ironically my parents are from NJ but they moved down to Miami in the 1970's before I was born. My father is still alive and kicking...I'll show him this video. I bet he will enjoy it. OMG...the controls at 15:19...those are the same exact controllers I had, I still have them. The black units with the 3 red switches and knob.
I was thinking this is N scale which is harder to work with than HO, but buys you a lot of space. attractive folds in the wall sounds so awesome I want to do that to this day but my N scale layout is unfinished…more like barely started… and hanging on the wall.
Yeah, I wondered about the scale too. It doesn't quite look like HO, it looks a little bit smaller. In Europe HO scale was very popular because of Hornby, but I get the impression that in the US there were many more scales to choose from. Isn't N scale really small, like miniature, as opposed to 'model' scale? It's a shame the author of the video didn't talk at all about the scale.
@@richardconway6425 Yeah its been a while since I had my father's set out but it's N and I believe the cars and engines are only about 3" long. Honestly loved the scale compared to HO. A well built model feels like you're holding an engine or even house in the palm of your hand.
I used to live a mile or so up the highway from Northlandz and stopped in a couple of times. It truly is amazing. This video doesn't even do justice to the size of this thing. Thanks for filming this and bringing this to peoples attention.
Wow,...This is the biggest model rail road I ever seen so far on You Tube or anywhere,....Great work and really detailed,...Thanks for sharing this video
The unique and essential thing I like (the most) with model railroads is being with someone (for exemple my girlfriend) and starting with only one track (the main line)... I have my room and she have his room ; our rooms become our distinct cities. I decide how I want it and she decide how she want it too. The only rule is : all needs must be transported via gondola wagons (camera in front of locomotives) and CB are our phones : "Azumi, I need this and that.. Can you..." .. "Hai, give me 10-15 mins"... "Ok, I am waitng for you on L3 and L4"... We can not see what the orther do but very good project of love "(^ . ^)" 💕
This is a wonderful video and this train setup is amazing. I could spend hours and hours there. I don't remember you saying was it all HO gauge? Those bridges are really a thing of wonder. So creative like real bridges. I remember when I was about 12 living in Albuquerque they would have the state fair there every summer, this was mid 70's. They have a train club go there and make a big setup that took up an entire building. I remember spending hours in there in just fascination. My mom and stepdad was so mad at me when they finally found me.
I went there years ago when my kid was young ( in their late 20s now). It was overwhelming and to be honest back then it was kind of monotonous. From the video it looks like that changed over the years, it looks fantastic. Glad it survived.
Mind boggling. When you mentioned early on that there were over 400 bridges and 8 _miles_ of track, I thought "Yeah, right.." And then 20 minutes flew by and I was left in complete awe of one man's vision and execution. Just.. wow.
What an absolute treat this video of the railway is! The inner workings of the railway (to call it a model railway is being petty) are simply awesome. The whole scale, depth and imagination of this fantastic project could be labelled the 8th wonder of the World.
you must visit the miniature wonderland in hamburg germany. still the largest model railway in the world today, with the largest model airport in the world.
It’s an incredible miniature world, I only wish there was more lighting like in the buildings and streets etc. would have been awesome to see the carnival rides moving and stuff too which I have seen in another huge layout I saw recently I forget where it was but the detail in that place was very impressive too just a different style. Would like to know how Bruce designed it before he started building it?
What a vision! Imagine Hour 1, just getting started.... Let this display live forever as vital history in our world growing ever more streamlined, factory-built and impersonal.
there is only one way to describe this... ABSOLUTELY GOBSMACKING AMAZING AND AWESOMENESS... The amount of detail that went into creating this, BREATHTAKING views....thank-you for a wonderful video
I was wishing my father was alive to see this. I'm 72, back in the 1950's, he filled the basement with a large layout, including bridges, mountains, turntable and roundhouse, all made in his cabinet shop, in his spare time. He was a mill-shop foreman at the local lumberyard during the day. Thanks so much for posting this wonderful video!!
wow, thanks for sharing that. My uncle had a layout in his loft ( i was about 5 at the time) and ever since seeing it i have wanted to build one. His also had ho scale slot cars on it, it may have been minic motor ways but i cannot recall, was many years ago. Now our child has grown up and moved out i am starting to collect bits for my own...
I had an Uncle Bob Schuh in Buffalo, NY that did the same thing... It all started when he built a small room on the back of the house for the washer/dryer/water heater, so he could claim the entire basement of his HUGE North Buffalo home for his model railroad... 40 years later, the train layout still wasn't finished, but quite impressive, nonetheless... He also owned a pattern/cabinet shop and WNY's best model train hobby shop, KVAL Hobbies... His was the GOTO model train shop for 100's of patrons for 6 counties around, plus Ontario... Unfortunately, my Uncle Bob passed away a couple years ago, well into his 80's... Any body who knew Bob Schuh or shopped at KVAL Hobbies is welcome to reply to me... Thanx...
@@cschuh4695 Most model railroad layouts are never finished. As they near completion, we decide to expand. Or, as our skill level increases, we become dissatisfied with our earlier efforts so we decide to redo. The layout becomes progressively more intricate and impressive. The fun is in the building, not the operation and maintenance.
My dad did the same thing, but in the 1990's. I'm in my 40's now and preparing to build my own. I just put up a 48x64 foot pole parn with 18' ceilings to house it and I'm using HO scale. It is to be my retirement projsect although I'll be working it as soon as I can. It was his dad who got him into it and now I'm on the same path. I hope model railroading never goes the way of the dinosaur.
Rock on, dude!! Long live Lionel!!@@mikeallen5291
The bridges are…mind blowing. The builder/creater’s skills are off the charts. What a legacy, what a gift.
I cannot believe Bruce was willing to sell the building for warehouse space after he put a tremendous amount of money, effort, passion, and especially time into this model railway. I’m glad the new owners are taking care of his work, I will have to see it someday! Great video as always!
Unfortunately folks are having to part with their creations, treasures and even homes anymore, due to today's expenses.
I pray that this was not his situation!
The new owner sure scored a treasure!
I know I don’t know why he sold the building.
I'm assuming this gentleman started this hobby project after retirement. So if he started when he was in his 60s, he could've been in his 90s around 2019 when he sold. So, at that age, he might have had ailing health and might have even had medical expenses rising to where he had to re-evaluate his priorities. When you're 90 years old and having to decide to move into an assisted living facility, that $1,000,000 building might be your only ticket into a nicer living location. It's sad, but it's life.
I can't assume anymore. It seems to backfire worse than ever Richard ♥️
@@RichardHartness Bruce started this journey into model railroading in the basement of his home when he lived in the Three Bridges area of NJ. As his home was being built he excavated extra basements for the layout. It was pretty much an individual effort except for when they had an open house around the Holidays. The local fire department was the beneficiary of any donations that were made. I'm talking back 40+ years ago or so. People moved into the area and complained so Bruce looked for someplace to go and that's when Northlandz happened.
A lot of the bridges you see here are direct transplants from that basement layout. THAT particular setup occupied 5 total basements under his house before he moved - all HO. The gentleman's full name is Bruce Williams Zaccagnino.
This needs to be put in a National Registry and protected at all costs.
Please put a go pro on the front of one it will get lots of views i would love to see that
YES
I DEFINITELY agree...This should be preserved no doubt about it !
then u have not seen the Miniatur-Wunderland in Hamburg
@@chedahmob6636Great idea.
Reminds me of Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg Germany. Whenever you're back in Europe, I highly encourage you to visit it. It WILL blow your mind. The level of detail and automation is just incredible.
Yes, the airport alone is incredible, the planes land, taxi, and take off.
@@royreynolds108 Even the plane engines sound like the real ones.
I spent ages waiting for their model Concorde to take off and land! Sad, I know!
Ja, nur dass die Hamburger ihr Fach beherrschen.
@@frankweiser3895ja dachte ich auch - ist schon ein anderes Level zur Detailverliebtheit. Das hier ist irgendwie einfach gross.
I am sitting here planning a two-moth EV roadtrip from Stockholm to Portugal and back in Autumn 2024. Hamburg is damn near unavoidable. Thus, I thank you and have added it to the ever-growing list.
Jesus that was AMAZING!!! For art lovers AND model train enthusiasts combined, that is starting my day off WELL today! TY!!
Jesus is my friend, is he your friend to? He can be if you take the time to get to know him.
Some peoples' passions are truly amazing. This is a work of art and should be preserved for future generations to admire.
Absolutely fantastic,this is what UA-cam wasintended for 😊
Grew up just outside of Flemington and spent so many hours here. I don't exaggerate that to me it was better than DisneyWorld. Thank you for bringing some spotlight on this beautiful place.
My grandfather had an N scale model train layout that took up about a third of the basement. He had it walled off, and all the buildings had lights in it so when he turned off the main light in the room and turn the lights on all the buildings, it look like a small town. It was one of the most amazing and beautiful things I ever saw.
My grandfather always loved trains but as a young orphan in west Germany during the 50s he couldn’t afford any. Fast forward 20 years or so later after gaining citizenship and a free ticket to Vietnam upon coming home he finally started a collection of all the German trains he never could afford as a child. I’m glad that I have them now to remember him with. I hope to have them up and running sometime this year. They meant a lot to him & they certainly mean a lot to me too. Thanks for making this video.
Guess you follow Mark Felton as well ?
@@voldeficient yes lol
Please document with videos on UA-cam
@@voldeficient saw your comment and thought, "how _in the [world]_ did he (and/or she) get to _that_ conclusion?" Then I saw the name... Ok. 👍
Sounds similar. If I wasn't a workaholic, I'd be a rail foamer. So much cool stuff.
I'm from this county! I had at least 4 of my childhood birthday parties there. 24 years old now and super relieved to see that this place full of personal memories is still alive and well. Will have to take a trip back up there to see it again
As a cartoon caracaturist I really appreciate this level of detail. I bet I could hours and hours just soaking this in, in the flesh, so to speak.
When I was a child in the 60's my parents took me and my brothers to a miniature world here in the UK. We felt like giants there, but it was nowhere near the scale of this place.
You are a caricaturist and you don‘t know how to spell your own profession?
I am totally blown away by the scale of NorthlandZ and all the hours and attention to detail it took to build it. Especially the attention to detail. Those bridges look like they were built with not-quite-toothpicks, but pretty close. It's hard to imagine building just one of those intricate bridges, let alone 400 of them (I think you said). I pray the area never has an earthquake. Thanks for showing this and thanks to Jim for allowing you to document it. Without it, few would know of its existence.
Thank you Bruce and the wonderful people that are keeping his legacy alive.
No comment I could say could express the awe I have for this.
This is a work of almost biblical proportions! I especially loved the factories!
Glad someone stepped in for the retiree creator. Being a former NJ native, nice to know something this monumental was created amd continues to exist.
You are always a NJ native.
@@MeMeDaVinci What a bummer
Wow! Unbelievable!!!! I'm glad the new owner of the building decided to carry on the legacy.
Made the trek here with the family in the early 2000s when Bruce Williams was still very hands-on with this place, what an interesting guy! he even took us for a ride on the outdoor railway on the property, and gave an organ recital in the theater there! So happy to see that this place still exists.
Been there many times when I used to live in NJ. It is an incredible place to visit. It is great that someone with a passion for trains purchased the property and saved it from becoming a statistic like Roadside America in Shartlesville, PA did. The story of Grandma who owns the house in the middle of the mine is a running story throughout Northlandz. She apparently is quite rich and owns lots of property throughout Northlandz.
My dad took me to Bruce's home basement a couple of times when he opened it to the public back in the early 1980s. Great memories.
I'm so excited you went here! I'm literally half a mile from this place! It is an amazing hidden gem in NJ! Glad you got a chance to enjoy
What exit do you get off at, and what is the name of the town
@@jamesridoni I'm near Philly and want to go there too! Try googling Northlandz. I'll do it now.
@@jamesridoni 495,off rt.202..River road exit..its in Flemington
I'm watching this with dropped jaw and tears in my eyes......It's the most BEAUTIFUL,MIND BLOWING,FANTASTIC,WORK OF ART I'VE EVER SEEN!!!......
When this attraction opened in '96, I lived only about a 25 minute drive away. Would take my house guests over here to see the layout. It was impressive then and remains so!
This is incredible! The artistry... I'm blown away watching the video, it must be super impressive to see in real life.
Absolutely amazing Model Railroad! Bruce really dedicated so much time and effort in building this and such perfection also. Thanks Chris for sharing!
As a TCA member & collector ( HO & O scale )since 2000 this is by far the most impressive layout I have ever seen. One can not wrap their head around the time consumption & visualization of building this enormous layout 👍🇺🇸
Incredible, hard to believe. Amazing what someone can do if completely driven.
Reminds me of the guy that built the B-29 homebuilt aircraft. Some guys have a vision and just take it to a whole-nother level. Driven is where they start then it rolls into driven obsession.
It’s always nice to see something online that is amazing and wholesome! Magnificent!!
I live a few miles from this absolutely amazing wonderland. Have been there many times. A must see.
I have been there several times. It is simply amazing!! The artistry and humor is everywhere and fun to see. A must for any model train enthusiast.
Incredible! I see it, but I still can't believe it! I remember when I was a kid, my friend's dad had his entire basement filled with model trains and things like this. Needless to say, it was nothing compared to this!
I'd love something like that in the future. Can just walk downstairs and play around with the trains.
@@MobileInstinct
Do you know the story why bruce sold it ? And how old he was at the time?
I think the message here is.
Kick ass paying attention to details in modeling made the world smaller before tech.
Both take talent.
Thanks for the ride❤
I’ll bet that Bruce decided to leave his obsession behind him and decided to go travel or do anything not in this building. Lots of hours spent there and a lot to show for it. Very cool he could move on. Even more cool that the person who bought the building saw the value of his work. Great Video!!!
The world needs more Bruce Williams,
My mind is blown on so many levels! First of all the amount of details is mind blowing! Pretty much every angle tops the one before. Then that it was built by one man! Then after putting all this work into this amazingly detailed art, he was willing to let it go. Thank you for the detailed video! I'm surprised that i never heard about this place. Wish i had a chance to see it in person!
It looks better now, than it was when I visited about a decade ago. I first visited back in the early 2000's and it was awesome. I went back a decade later and it was run down with big holes in the scenery and broken structures and only a few 2 or 3 car trains running. What a disappointment my second visit was. I'm happy to see it has been restored and in operation.
Thank you, and thank you to Jim as well. I don't think I will ever get to see this in person, so it's great to see video of it.
Some commenters compare this layout with the miniatur-wunderland in Hamburg. I think it is something very different. The one in Hamburg was aimed from the very start to be the largest Model-Landscape in the World. No matter at what cost, no matter how many people have to work on it. THIS however is one man realizing his dreamworld all by himself. And you can see that it's done by one artist alone. There is a certain "handwriting" to it. You can clearly see that he adored building bridges! Sure, the one in Hamburg is on a much higher level of proficiency. But this has character. This is art.
Well said!
The absurdly steep and tall mountains are what Miniatur-Wunderland lacks
he was genius for being able to plan this out and build it with the ability to maintain it in the future. just stunning. his skill is quite obvious.
Very impressive. Can't imagine setting aside all the time to build and maintain this miniature world.
My grandmother took me here as a child and man was it paradise… still is frankly. I need to go back, this place is a treasure and must be protected at all costs. Additionally a documentary should really be made.
That was really a piece of art. So much detail it must have been fun for him. It kind of reminded me of the hills of West Virginia. Thanks for showing us. 💞🚆
I love how impossible and whimsical the bridges are, it feels like this world is so fantastical yet so believable.
Wow, what a great video Chris! You cover everything, from graveyards to Kensington to the largest model railroad layout in the world! I live in Pennsylvania, about 60 miles away from Flemington, and definitely have to check this place out. I'm a huge railroad fan, both real and model, and was amazed also at the recreation of Harpers Ferry, WV, of which I have been through on Amtrak. Thanks for posting this!
Salvadore Dali style glued to the mountains. Its like a painting. When you are finished you are finished for good. Very inspiring.
What a stunning display. The sure amount of work into it is astounding.
Thank god this is being preserved. Incredible modeling
Went to Northlantz back in like 2018 or 2019 and got to meet Bruce. Very nice guy. He was right at the front, with this little half-open office full of cameras all over the layout. Glad to see the place is in good shape!
I will say this. The new owners have a better taste in trains. When I saw it, the trains were shorter and only had F-unit locomotives. Good to see longer trains with more variety.
Grew up a couple miles from here and went a few times in my youth. Flemington has alot of great history. Glad to see Northlandz is still alive.
Oh my God. Didn't know such a huge Train museum existed. Thank you.
I was there in the 90's, it's awesome, and hope it is preserved for generations to come. A work of art for sure.
SIMPLY AMAZING!!!! THERE ARE NO WOEDS FOR THIS ,,,,,THIS ,,,,,THIS CAN'T EVEN CAN'T EVEN CALL IT A TRAIN SET. A MARVELOUS WORK OR ART AND ESPECIALLY LOVE. GREAT JOB !
Very cool video! This place was awesome. I’m a big model train fan so this was nice to see
Gotcha check it out when you come through New Jersey
@@MobileInstinct 100%!
This is one of the most incredible pieces of art I have ever seen with exception of my better half. She is still to me one of the most incredible pieces of art ever made. Gods masterpiece !! I would love to see this someday. It is now on my bucket list thank you for this video.
Fantastic tour! Thank you so much for taking the time to do such a great in depth video.
🙂
This is amazing. I have no words for what I'm looking at.
Never heard of your channel or seen anything train related. But holy hell is this cool. Absolutely beautiful
I generally hope that this amazing layoutvwill be kept for many years to come and even generations so more and more people can get to view snd enjoy this wonderful layout for future generation's to enjoy 😊
Wow! Simply incredible! Thanks for taking me along. Loved your Satchmo impression ❤
Absolutely fantastic Chris. This video is so exciting to see very impressive. Many thanks for visiting and sharing. Take care Chris 🇬🇧🇺🇸💯
Is that 8 miles of track or 8 scale miles of track?? From you narrating I’d say 8 real actual miles of track!!!!! AMAZING‼️🇺🇸🇺🇸🇳🇿
Wow! I built my own- 60 locos, 100 coaches, 200 wagons, 300 ft track , mountains tunnels, river, bridges , roads, buildings , 8 controllers, sidings, plus more .That was big enough - sold the lot n moved to Spain. Miss em now 😢.Took 45 yrs. total collecting
The control room deserves a video of its own.
There really isn't that much to the control room besides looks, its more or less a very impressive shelf for all the power packs. Besides the small square amp and volt meters above each packs the rest is just for show
No words!! Very Impressive!
I don't even want to think about how you maintain something like this.
Cleaning tracks, dusting off the models, getting to a stuck train on a bridge!
An amazing layout.
Looks like HO scale, my favorite scale for trains. They look the most realistic. When the scale gets bigger you have that center 3rd rail which kills the "scale" part of it. When I was 9-10 years old in the 1980's my dad built me a killer HO scale layout. It was roughly 12 feet by 8 feet with two tracks (can run two trains at once) and was highly detailed with streets, buildings, houses, cars and even working lights in every building. There was even a Kentucky Fried Chicken. The RR crossing gates would lower when the trains approached the road. And amazingly he built it without me knowing it. He made it so it could fold up into the wall of our "play room" and when folded up all you saw was a large rectangle gap in the paneling on the wall. I thought nothing of it at my age. He would work on it when I was asleep at night or if he had a day off work while I was at school. Took him 6 months and he unveiled it one Christmas morning. The way he surprised me was when I opened some presents on Christmas morning and they were trains, HO scale locomotive and 10 rail cars. I was confused until he tole me to go in the play room where the layout was folded down and all the lights lit up in the houses. LOL. I thought that was impressive and it was. But the layout in this video is in a league of it's own. Ironically my parents are from NJ but they moved down to Miami in the 1970's before I was born. My father is still alive and kicking...I'll show him this video. I bet he will enjoy it.
OMG...the controls at 15:19...those are the same exact controllers I had, I still have them. The black units with the 3 red switches and knob.
I was thinking this is N scale which is harder to work with than HO, but buys you a lot of space. attractive folds in the wall sounds so awesome I want to do that to this day but my N scale layout is unfinished…more like barely started… and hanging on the wall.
Yeah, I wondered about the scale too. It doesn't quite look like HO, it looks a little bit smaller. In Europe HO scale was very popular because of Hornby, but I get the impression that in the US there were many more scales to choose from. Isn't N scale really small, like miniature, as opposed to 'model' scale? It's a shame the author of the video didn't talk at all about the scale.
@@richardconway6425 Yeah its been a while since I had my father's set out but it's N and I believe the cars and engines are only about 3" long. Honestly loved the scale compared to HO. A well built model feels like you're holding an engine or even house in the palm of your hand.
I used to live a mile or so up the highway from Northlandz and stopped in a couple of times. It truly is amazing. This video doesn't even do justice to the size of this thing. Thanks for filming this and bringing this to peoples attention.
I agree 100% To see this in person is so much better.
Such an amazing place Chris. Awesome editing as well as the video. Keep up the good work.
WOW, WOW ,WOW ,AWESOME, i just don't know what to say, I will watching this again and again, thank you for sharing.
WOW This is awesome no words 😊😊👍👍👍👍
I went there some years ago, it's so worth the trip. The narrator was right its unbelievable.
Fantastic Chris! Amazing place and amazing accomplishment. As always, a wonderful job!
Wow,...This is the biggest model rail road I ever seen so far on You Tube or anywhere,....Great work and really detailed,...Thanks for sharing this video
The unique and essential thing I like (the most) with model railroads is being with someone (for exemple my girlfriend) and starting with only one track (the main line)... I have my room and she have his room ; our rooms become our distinct cities. I decide how I want it and she decide how she want it too. The only rule is : all needs must be transported via gondola wagons (camera in front of locomotives) and CB are our phones : "Azumi, I need this and that.. Can you..." .. "Hai, give me 10-15 mins"... "Ok, I am waitng for you on L3 and L4"... We can not see what the orther do but very good project of love "(^ . ^)" 💕
That sounds like a lot of fun.
@@theViomax sure it is "(^^)"
Wow. ....... words cannot even come close to say how amazing this layout looks Wow.....just Beautiful thankyou for the inspiration....Wow
That's the most insane thing I've ever seen in my entire life
Amazing. We should all cherish this. It’s got love written all over it.
2:10 "That's me off to work, Sue."
"Don't forget your climbing gear, Frank."
For once I'm speechless...! Outstanding and amazing...
This is a wonderful video and this train setup is amazing. I could spend hours and hours there. I don't remember you saying was it all HO gauge? Those bridges are really a thing of wonder. So creative like real bridges. I remember when I was about 12 living in Albuquerque they would have the state fair there every summer, this was mid 70's. They have a train club go there and make a big setup that took up an entire building. I remember spending hours in there in just fascination. My mom and stepdad was so mad at me when they finally found me.
Northlandz is a mixture of gauges. Bruce originally was into HO.
Some of the best rock carving I've seen yet on UA-cam!
The work is incredible, some of the Arch Bridges are not accurate but they look cool.
I visited here a few months ago. The place is _massive,_ yet everywhere seems to be carefully detailed. I definitely recommend visiting.
Hamburg can give this place a run for it's money, but this is certainly very impressive.
Outstanding, I hope it gets preserved for all history
I went there years ago when my kid was young ( in their late 20s now). It was overwhelming and to be honest back then it was kind of monotonous. From the video it looks like that changed over the years, it looks fantastic. Glad it survived.
Mind boggling.
When you mentioned early on that there were over 400 bridges and 8 _miles_ of track, I thought "Yeah, right.."
And then 20 minutes flew by and I was left in complete awe of one man's vision and execution.
Just.. wow.
What an absolute treat this video of the railway is! The inner workings of the railway (to call it a model railway is being petty) are simply awesome. The whole scale, depth and imagination of this fantastic project could be labelled the 8th wonder of the World.
you must visit the miniature wonderland in hamburg germany. still the largest model railway in the world today, with the largest model airport in the world.
I am speechless!!! Wow...just WOW.
♥️ From Australia
It’s an incredible miniature world, I only wish there was more lighting like in the buildings and streets etc. would have been awesome to see the carnival rides moving and stuff too which I have seen in another huge layout I saw recently I forget where it was but the detail in that place was very impressive too just a different style. Would like to know how Bruce designed it before he started building it?
What a vision! Imagine Hour 1, just getting started.... Let this display live forever as vital history in our world growing ever more streamlined, factory-built and impersonal.
2:22 I see a head in the grey rock, top center. Short hair, looking down and to the left.
I got to see this a few years ago, when Bruce was still running it. It's wonderful to see Northlandz is still thriving.
i live 10 minutes from Northlandz and can confirm it's an amazing space to visit, way more crazy in person
WOW.....Thanks for taking us here.
there is only one way to describe this...
ABSOLUTELY GOBSMACKING AMAZING AND AWESOMENESS...
The amount of detail that went into creating this, BREATHTAKING views....thank-you for a wonderful video
I'm 26 years old, and I'm unashamed to admit that I'd turn into a kid the moment I step foot in this place. This is absolutely amazing.
This is an impressive display! You can see the craftsmanship in this display!
Rude, crude and vile - I love it! 😍😍