Friday, October 24, 2025

A Model Railway Exhibition in Norway

Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.

Even if members from my model railway club often goes to model railway shows abroad, we do have model railway exhibitions in Norway too. It's not so many of them and they are usually not so large. It's nice to visit them because the model railway society in Norway are not so large, so you're going to meet a lot of freinds and other nice people (you probably knows some how).

Earlier this autumn I visited one such small model railway show at Skedsmo, some 15km north of the capital, Oslo. There were not so many layouts on such a small venue, but I was struck by the high level of standard and detail on some of them.

Here are a couple of overview photos:

Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.

Layouts

The first layout out in this blogpost is a H0-scale Norwegian Tram-layout from Oslo. It's 'freelanced' but all the structures are built after real prototypes. I used to pass the row of buildings in the second photo every day to and from work for 7 years, so this was very nostalgic to me. This layout is built to a very high standard, and the builder is extremely skillful:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
This N-scale layout is a rebuilt ready made landscape-board by Noch. The season is altered to winter, and set to the Rauma line in Norway:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
A modular island-style Norwegian H0-scale layout also built to high standards by father and son:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
This small H0-scale winter layout is actually built as a window-display for a pharmacy (hence the shelves between the tunnels) by a member of our model railway club:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
A Z-scale layout:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Some scenes from another Norwegian H0 scale layout:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Here is another 'Norwegain' H0 scale tram-layout. It's mostly freelanced, but the fire station (the large white building) is based on one from Oslo:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
The Model Railway Association of Norway, MjF, displayed a large G-scale layout on the floor with several trains kids could run them self: 
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.

Displays

On the show there was also some displays in H0 scale with static trains. The first one depicts a scene from the 'Flight of the Norwegian National Treasury' in 1940, where the Norwegian gold reserves was loaded from train to lorries near Åndalsnes to keep it away from the Germans. It's recentlybeen made a movie about this (perhaps on Netflix?):
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
This H0 display was a funfair with a lot of 'animations' and lights:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
Another H0 scale display with moving cars. Probably by Faller Car System':
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
This is from the Living Steam stand with live steam and RC diesel engines. I think a 'grey' diesel would fit my collection (?):
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.
I didn't actually plan to buy anything at this show, as I've already have model railway projects enough to keep me busy through the whole winter. I did end up buying this heavily worn LGB car looking like a piece of junk for only £ 14,90 or $ 19,90, because I was looking for LGB steel wheels for another project, and a pair of those costs £ 29,43 $ 39,30 in the shop. The wagon it self looks like it's been serving as a transition wagon with LGB-couplings in one end and Märklin Gauge 1 couplings in the other. The re-modelling is not very neatly executed. The wagon it self is of the same type as I used for my own transition wagon with LGB-couplings in one end, and 3 link coupling in the other. Even if I bought this wagon to get it's steel wheels, I guess i can refit it with plastic wheels and salvage it some how. Time will show:
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.

Some acquisitions are mandatory on shows though...
Explore detailed layouts, trade tables, and live displays at Norway’s Skedsmo Model Railway Exhibition.

All in all this was a great little show. It's usually held annually in the beginning of October, and I recommend a visit if you're in the area.

11 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your pictures and videos Roger - looks like it was a good show.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you!
      It was a small show, but yes, a good one.
      Some of the trade stalls had real good offers too.

      Delete
  2. Roger,

    There seemed to be a lot of excellent layouts on show ... and it was nice to see non-UK settings for the layouts.

    All the best,

    Bob

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Bob. UK settings on layouts are rare in Norway. I think I only know a couple on the 'exhibition circuit'. -So they're pretty exotic here. On this show however one trader showed his newly imported Rapido trains in 00, so it will be interesting to see if this will results in more UK layouts in the future.

      Delete
  3. Hello Roger, thank you for putting all these interesting photos of layouts online. I found the Gulltransporten one interesting and have posted a link on my Sidetracked blog about railways and wargaming overlaps. https://sidetracked2017blog.wordpress.com/2025/10/24/gulltransporten-or-gold-transport-norway-april-1940/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Mark!
      I've took a look at your Sidetracked blog, and your excellent blogpost on the 'Gold Run' and other overlapping actions. It was so great that I'll revisit your Sidetracked blog and read it closer again. I also recommend ither readers here to do the same:

      https://sidetracked2017blog.wordpress.com/2025/10/24/gulltransporten-or-gold-transport-norway-april-1940/

      Last year I was riding in Romsdalen with my motorcycle. I stopped at Trollveggen Railway station, where they had made a 'mini museum' in an old railway van next to the station house to tell the story about the dramatic gold flight. When I was visiting my son in Ålesund in May earlier this year, I also vent to visit the model railway display at Devold Factory, as they had recently open a new part on their large layout depicting the Rauma branch line. At their Trollveggen station in model, they had also added the same van next to it as the 'mini museum'. In the blogpost from that visit, I posted photos of this 'museum' both from the layout and from the visit I had done to the real thing the year before:

      https://modelrailsandwargames.blogspot.com/2025/05/the-atlantic-wall-and-public-model.html

      Thanks for reading and commenting!

      Delete
    2. I've tried to comment a couple of your blogposts lately, but none of them made it to the comment-section. It looks like these problems occurred after I logged on a WordPress account when commenting.

      Delete
  4. Most enjoyable post. Thanks for sharing this.
    Alan Tradgardland

    ReplyDelete
  5. Som alltid gøy å se og lese

    ReplyDelete

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