The Denver Post

MODEL TRAINS OFFER COMFORT DURING PANDEMIC

People are gravitatin­g to model trains while being stuck inside during the pandemic

- By Christophe­r F. Schuetze

Last spring, the managers at Märklin, the 162-year-old maker of model trains in Germany, were surprised by something unexpected in the sales reports. “We started to notice a serious uptick in orders,” said Florian Sieber, a director at Märklin. The jump continued into summer — a further surprise, he said, because that is “when people don’t usually buy indoor train sets.”

But buy they did. In November, Märklin’s monthly orders were up 70% over the previous year. The company’s video introducin­g its new trains and accessorie­s, posted in January, has been viewed more than 165,000 times.

Along with baking and jigsaw puzzles earlier in the pandemic, model trains are among the passions being rediscover­ed while people are cooped up indoors. Several companies that make trains are reporting jumps in sales. For many people, the chance to create a separate, better world in their living room — with stunning mountains, tiny chugging locomotive­s and communitie­s of inch-high people where no one needs a mask — is hard to resist.

“It is a traditiona­l toy that through digital functions, like sound and light, has become more and more like a real train.”

Uwe Müller , wa s the product manager at Märklin for 15 years and now runs the Märklineum ,t h ec ompany ’sm useum

“Outside, there is total chaos, but inside, around my little train set, it is quiet, it is picturesqu­e,” said Magnus Hellstrom, 48, a high school teacher in Sweden who has indulged in his hobby while working from home during lockdowns.

“It’s a little piece of a perfect world,” he said.

Hellstrom is one of many Märklin enthusiast­s. The company, which filed for bankruptcy protection more than a decade ago, is now for the first time in years hiring new apprentice­s to learn the precise work of making superdetai­led tiny trains.

“We’re booming so much, it’s hard to keep up,” said Maria Huta, 64, who has assembled trains for 38 years at the company’s main facility in Göppingen, a town 25 miles southeast of Stuttgart, where the company was founded.

The factory building is more than a century old, and touring the facility is a trip back in time: a factory floor with skilled manual laborers toiling over workbenche­s. Huta and her colleagues often use a microscope to attach tiny details such as bells or handrails. The company employs about 1,170 full-time employees at its two locations. (The other location is in Gyor, Hungary.)

“We used to contract some of our parts abroad, but we found mostly it was not worth it; the filigree of some of our parts was so fine that we often had to return things,” said Gerhard Tastl, the plant’s production manager, during a factory tour conducted over video.

The Märklin trains come in three scales, with H0-gauge models the most popular. A high-end Gauge 1 locomotive, made up of several thousand individual parts, can cost up to $4,200 new (and much more if the train becomes a collectors’ item), although lowercost locomotive­s, composed of about 300 parts, sell for about one-tenth of the price. Märklin also makes LGB trains, which are larger and designed to be set up outdoors.

Most H0-gauge trains are built

from scratch out of basic elements — zinc alloy, steel, plastic pellets and paint — in the Göppingen plant, allowing Märklin to mark these models “Made in Germany.” Parts for other models are made in Göppingen and then assembled in the Hungarian plant.

“For our customers, it’s less about saying it comes just from this one factory in Germany and more about the Märklin signature,” said Tastl, noting that some of the electronic­s in the modern trains might come from Asia.

Although the trains that leave the factory floor might resemble the models produced here decades ago, they hide features that were unavailabl­e back then. They now include tiny speakers that reproduce scores of digital chugging noises and whistles (recorded, if possible, from the original), and interior and exterior lights that can be controlled separately. Another feature simulates how actual trains leave the station (very slowly, then gradually gathering speed) and later slowly decelerate to a stop.

A new feature is the remotecont­rolled raising and lowering of an electric pantograph, the apparatus atop a train that connects with overhead wires. Real steam coming out of the steam locomotive­s has been a feature for years.

“What’s really changed during the last 20 years is the focus on truly replicatin­g the original,” Sieber said.

The trains can be controlled by computer console or by a phone app, with different trains on the same track going different speeds or traveling different circuits. Märklin even added the option of controllin­g the trains via train engineer simulator software, allowing devotees to control their model train as if they were sitting in the engineer’s chair.

“It is a traditiona­l toy that through digital functions, like sound and light, has become more and more like a real train,” said Uwe Müller, who was a product manager at Märklin for 15 years and now runs the Märklineum, the company’s museum.

Founded in 1859 by Theodor Friedrich Wilhelm Märklin, the company first sold doll accessorie­s. After the founder’s death seven years later, the company grew under his young widow, Caroline Märklin, who was one of the company’s first traveling saleswomen, covering territorie­s in the south of Germany and Switzerlan­d.

The company started producing windup model trains in 1891 and continued to be owned by different branches of the family until 2006, when it was sold to Kingsbridg­e Capital, an investment firm. But the company was losing money and had to lay off many hundreds of employees, and in 2009 it filed for bankruptcy protection. Then, in 2013, a privately owned German toymaker named Simba Dickie bought the company, trying to salvage what it saw as an important brand.

Sieber, whose father founded Simba Dickie in 1982 and who is now co-CEO of the group, said it took a few years to sort out Märklin’s finances. But he said the workers were a critical resource.

“When we first had a very serious look at them, we were so surprised at what we found; the technical know-how of the staff was just unique in the industry,” said Sieber, 35, who fondly remembers playing on a Märklin set as a child with his grandfathe­r.

By 2015, things were looking up. Orders were coming in again, and the new management had sought and won new customers with social media outreach campaigns. (The Märklin Insider club, which has more than 50,000 members

worldwide, helps the company keep track of its customers.)

“I have to admit, things are looking better now than they did years ago,” Huta said. She is part of a board representi­ng the workers in negotiatio­ns with the factory owners, and she remembers vividly when many of her colleagues were let go when the company’s future seemed unclear.

The boom in sales from the pandemic has led to shortages of some parts, including rails. Certain special models have sold out,

such as a model of the 078 series, a steam locomotive used by the West German national rail in the 1960s and 1970s. In a first since Simba Dickie took over, the company is training new apprentice­s to join the roughly 700-strong workforce in Hungary.

The company is betting that many of the people drawn to Märklin trains during the pandemic stick with model trains afterward. “Because it really is not the kind of hobby that you do for two weeks and then abandon,” Sieber said.

 ?? Photos by Felix Schmitt, © The New York Times Co. ?? The ground floor of the Märklenium — a museum and exhibition space that is a shrine to the brand Märklin, a 162-year-old company that makes model trains — in Göppingen, Germany, in February.
Photos by Felix Schmitt, © The New York Times Co. The ground floor of the Märklenium — a museum and exhibition space that is a shrine to the brand Märklin, a 162-year-old company that makes model trains — in Göppingen, Germany, in February.
 ??  ?? Anna Steiner, who joined Märklin in 1989, works on the model train BR 85 from the ZTrack series at the company’s facility in Göppingen.
Anna Steiner, who joined Märklin in 1989, works on the model train BR 85 from the ZTrack series at the company’s facility in Göppingen.
 ?? Photos by Felix Schmitt, © The New York Times Co. ?? Tobias Blessing, a Märklin employee, works on a model train landscape at the workshop in Göppingen, Germany. In November, Märklin’s monthly orders were up 70% over the previous year.
Photos by Felix Schmitt, © The New York Times Co. Tobias Blessing, a Märklin employee, works on a model train landscape at the workshop in Göppingen, Germany. In November, Märklin’s monthly orders were up 70% over the previous year.
 ??  ?? A Märklin employee works on a bronze cast locomotive BR 85 at the company’s model train facility in Göppingen.
A Märklin employee works on a bronze cast locomotive BR 85 at the company’s model train facility in Göppingen.

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