sarge wrote:How 'bout putting an icehouse there on pilings off the end; locals cut the ice off the pond in winter to fill it, stored through the year in the icehouse and loaded on both railroads (usually shipped in empty refrgerator cars or boxcars with straw or sawdust used as insulation, sent to icing plants/platforms and other commercial applications) during the summer months. You can back trucks to it too, so the iceman can deliver to the local residents.
This is the supply end no-one models, though there are kits for icing platforms to re-ice reefers. Those platforms are usually seen in division point yards rather than along the source of the ice, so the destination for the cars you'd load at the icehouse itself.
As far as the icehouse itself, usually a reasonably tall thing about the proportions of a barn or a wooden grainmill building. No windows of course, as they had double walls with sawdust filling in between. Usually a simple rectangular footprint. A signature feature is a louvred cupola or two up top. In summer the louvres would be adjusted to get airflow passing completely through the cupola so warmer air trapped under the roof would get pulled out by a venturi effect. Dam clever; folks back then weren't idiots by any means.
I was thinking more like a boy fishing off the end of the peer

However if someone is going to make a suggestion that clearly has some modeling skills it absolutely worth pondering in my opinion. This lake area is one of the largest more unfinished parts of my layout and getting it completed would allow me then to drop back and start working on other details while the layout has a mostly finished appearance to it.
Moving on, an ice house has potential with a few exceptions. One is finding a model or kit to build that would look more realistic and then finding time to complete it when there are many others still in the queue. Shoe horning a road in between the track and the wall for trucks to enter poses another issue as there is not very much room.
When I did a search for ice houses this flat came up which could be an option with the exception that it now sits on the opposite side of the tracks from where the ice would be harvested. The photos show almost exactly what my scenario would be with the exception of a mountainous region behind it.
One other little side bar is, when I was married 32 years ago we honeymooned on squam lake in New Hampshire. They had an ice house there, where the ice was harvested and stored in saw dust as you mentioned. There are some photos of that online and maybe it’s worth looking into. I will do a search and post a few pics.


Here is the Rockywold Ice house


