I wanted to take advantage of the size of N gauge and be able to run near to scale length trains in a busy mainline setting while also allowing for the appearance of a branchline. I struck on the idea of a double track figure of eight with junctions set to allow it to run as a regular circuit as well. This would allow me to design in the branch junction which in reality would just be the return loop on the figure eight.

The basic trackplan I settled on.
The layout was designed to sit on two baseboards, the main board being 7'6" and consisting of the high level station and low level goods yard linked by a severe 1:35 gradient on a 11.5 inch radius 180 degree curve. The second board would be the middle level loop, mostly hidden by a town scene with only the front running lines visible to give me the beginning my branch line illusion with enough room for an engine shed/turntable if I want it. The gradients between high and low levels on this board are less severe; 1:40 on 24" radius reverse curves down to the low level on the visible section and 1:50 on 11.5" curves up to the high level in the hidden section (greyed out on the plan).

High and Low-level overview

The site of the engine shed in Mid-level.
The station is actually a mirror image of a plan of Llandudno Junction, condensed a bit to fit the space, and altered a lot to allow me to use Peco Finescale without having to cut anything about too severely...so not really Llandudno anymore, but thats the basis hehe


A wiring nightmare! It will be nice to see it work fully...one day

The biggest concern I had when the boards were constructed and main running lines laid was how would lengthy freight trains cope with the horrendous gradient and tight curve. I couldn't even test it until the second board was built and track laid, so all through the construction I had a big weight on my mind as to whether it would all prove to be a waste of time. Either the trains would derail on the tight bend under the weight of gravity pulling them back, or the engines wouldn't be capable of hauling what I wanted up the long 1:35 stretch. After a week of long nights I had the boards built and enough track laid to test the "big one" using a Black 5 and all of the coaches I owned at the time. I must say I was impressed when she crested the gradient with 8 mark 1's in tow with little trouble, so I started adding wagons until the engine started to slip a bit. I've since found that the comfortable limit for a Farish Black 5 is 10 coaches. Freight trains are a different matter all together! I didn't have enough wagons to test it properly for some time...

Stanier 8F number 48045 negotiates the 1:40 gradient and junctions between Mid-level and Low-level with a lengthy coal train.

The 8F reaches High-level at a crawl, slipping slightly towards the end, it's train of 28 plus brake van fully on the 1:35 gradient. This is about the limit of a single Farish engines capability on the line.
And lastly why Canon Street for a name? Well, I do also have a soft spot for amateur photography and when I was struggling for a name, I noticed a lens box I'd left on the station area...