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EMU made easy: the SNCB AM96
One of the more peculiar trains in Belgium is the AM96 electric multiple unit, used mainly on Intercity services. The blunt, rubber-edged nose makes it feel like some kind of afterthought on another project... and that's kind of the case. The AM96 was ordered at the same time as a batch of Intercity coaches, and the constructor, in this case Bombardier, basically went "ok, let's just build more coaches and motorise them"!
central station // liège
architect: santiago calatrava
completion: 2009
colorful roof design: daniel buren "comme tombées du ciel, les couleurs in situ et en mouvement" 2022
the place to arrive and depart from in liège is definitely the new central station. it was designed by the famous architect santiago calatrava and the building is definitely a masterpiece. at the time of taking the photos, the roof was still covered with the vinyl foils of the artwork 'comme tombées du ciel, les couleurs in situ et en mouvement' by daniel buren. unfortunately, the installation only lasted until the summer of this year. sadly, the installation only lasted until the summer of this year, so I can't say whether they've been removed, but in my opinion, they could have stayed, and I think many residents feel the same.
der ort des ankommens und des abschieds in liège ist definitiv der neue hauptbahnhof. der entwurf stammt vom bekannten architekten santiago calatrava und das bauwerk ist definitiv ein meisterwerk. zur zeit der aufnahmen war das dach noch mit den vinylfolien des kunstwerkes "comme tombées du ciel, les couleurs in situ et en mouvement" von daniel buren beklebt. die daraus resultierenden lichtsituationen sind grandios. leider lief die installation nur bis sommer diesen jahres und ich kann nicht sagen, ob sie schon entfernt wurden. von mir aus hätten sie aber bleiben können, und ich denke viele einwohner und besucher sehen es ebenso.
this is how it feels to find Sam more attractive than Colby

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Station hopping a lot during the holidays, but the fog tonight makes it Extra
Battle of the low countries’ m-class double deckers! Which one wins your heart?
M-class double decker showdown!
NMBS-SNCB Alstom m7
NS Bombardier VIRM m1
@nmbs-sncb-official
Random Trains I Found Part 2:
So, I did a Part 1, and now I'm doing a Part 2 because there are many trains, and I enjoy procrastinating on just about everything. With this in mind, here's what I have in store:
Southern Pacific MC-1:
Ok, so these things were behemoths - 2-8-8-2 American giants which were built in 1908. And while they weren't the most useful engines built on this earth, they lived surprisingly long... as rebuilt cab-forward engines. Yup, the Southern Pacific swapped them around and turned them into Cab-Forward locomotives in the 1920s, having been the basis for the MC-2 and later AC models of Cab-Forward. Not a bad legacy!
SNCB Type 36:
Big Belgians! This 1909 class of 2-10-0 was built to work heavy freight trains over hilly terrain. And if you know anything about European history, then you'll know this class got caught up in WWI - only, for some reason they ended up in Russia, Poland and Ukraine? The reason for that is that they were sold to Russia to work lines in occupied, standard gauge Austrian territory (and Ukraine?) Five of them were eventually returned by the Poles. The type also influenced the L&YR to design their own 2-10-0... that wasn't built because of the same war.
Royal Bavarian State Railways S 3/6:
I like these purely because they look fabulous - and they were the second Pacific type in Germany, after their Baden brethren. See, prior to 1920, Germany wasn't served by one single railway, but rather a number of railways built by the nations that preceded the German Empire (which was only founded in 1870). So while Prussia was busy building the P8 class, the Bavarians built this! And annoyingly, I cannot find a model of one anyone, because Marklin won't ship to where I live.
JNR 9700 Type:
These engines are where we get the nickname 'Mikado' for the 2-8-2 wheel arrangement. They weren't the first 2-8-2's built, but were instead heavily promoted by Baldwin at a time when Japan was very interesting to the Western nations - a Savoy Opera of the same name had premiered in England in 1885, and Emperor Meiji was known in the US as 'the Mikado'. As for the engines? Apart from their part in wheel arrangement history, they were the most powerful engines in Japan when they arrived... but very little is actually known about their careers, only that they were scrapped in 1922.
LNWR DX Goods class:
For a class built in the 1850's, these engines sure are modern! By which I mean, they built 943 of them, making it one of the largest locomotive classes in Britain and also one of the first examples of standardisation and mass-production. They were also 0-6-0s, had an equivalent tank engine class (the LNWR Special Tanks) and were all gone by 1930, with none surviving. However, considering the first was built in 1858, that is still a 72-year working life. They were rebuilt several times, caused an injunction by private companies when the L&YR bought 86 fresh from Crewe, and were the LNWR's go-to goods engine.
I still want these engines - and I have more I want to talk about in the future. Unfortunately, it's not easy to discover much about engines from outside the Anglosphere due to the lack of translations out there (I have resorted to Wikipedia in other languages, and then google translate). But it makes finding those oddities that much more fun!
And as usual, all images belong to their respective owners.