Now and then I've been playing around with saving screen shots off YouTube or other photo sources on the web and seeing if I can make my own building flats that fit the modern era, at least as a stopgap. My first experiment was an N scale compatible flat based on a YouTube screen shot of the Morrow Hotel, which overlooks the Amtrak Northeast Corridor just north of Union Station in Washington. It's posed on a single-wide T-TRAK module in the photo below.
I made it using the cardboard from a Triscuit carton. I printed the screen shot out on ordinary printing paper, glued it to the cardboard using Elmer's glue, pressed the cardboard on a sheet of glass under weights overnight, and assembled the box with more of the carton braced with used fireplace matches.More recently, I decided to see if I could extend this into a full backdrop that would fit the whole width of a single-wide T-TRAK module, which is 12-1/8". I found a photo of a concrete parking garage that printed out very close to N scale and built a second building flat using a second Triscuit carton the same way:
Right now, this is just a proof-of-concept, but I feel encouraged. Commercial building flats actually need quite a bit of work with Photoshop to edit out perspectve effects and random unwanted details, but the result here is at least a lot closer to what I see riding Amtrak on YouTube, and as I see more opportunities on the web, I'll do other experiments.