Light Model
The important thing to keep in mind is the gain level of the screen, the higher, the better it will be for a room with some light in it. These screens are readily available, but a bit expensive, 92" think about $2000 for a fixed screen from a good manufacturer. I work in a high end home theater store which carries Stewart and Screen Innovations, which both make screens that would do the trick, but other brands also would work. As for projectors, a projector's lumens rating can be fudged, just like its contrast ratio, by using different testing methods, so reading user reviews, magazine reviews, and actually seeing them would help. It is difficult to reccomend a specific projector without a price range, approximate screen size, and wheter or not you want HD, but I'll give you a few options, Sony's 3lcd HD front projector's a good one @ about $2000, Sharp has an entry level HD DLP projector with an iris control (which allows you to adjust brightness, contrast, etc.) for about$2800, and Infocus has a DLP projector for about $5000 which would work well too. For the ultimate, readily available HD projector for your applicaton, I'd say Sony's SXRD 1080p front projector would be the best outside of ultra, ultra high-end that would give you THE BEST picture, but @ $10000 it's not cheap. It features a xenon lamp, similar to the xenon lamps in some car headlights, that will really help keep the picture viewable, but even still, try your hardest to find a solution which doesn't involve needing to have a bright room, explore curtains, shades, etc. if at all possible, it will save you a lot of money.
BMW GINA Light Visionary Model: Premiere
Station Building
Amtrak has very limited service to Houston, which is probably why the station looks so bad. The Sunset Limited (New Orleans to Los Angeles) stops in Houston going westbound at 9:13pm on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and at 5:45 going eastbound on Tuesday, Friday and Sunday. There is also a bus connection, as has been pointed out, to the Texas Eagle, which goes from Chicago to Los Angeles.
Texas as a whole hasn't invested much in their train service, maybe because of the large distances involved, or maybe due to their love of automobiles.
The state of the station owes more to the city than to Amtrak. Many cities have invested in fixing up their train stations, much as they have invested in building decent airports. Others haven't. Given the limited amount of train service to Texas, I guess that Houston doesn't feel motivated to invest.
How to make a realistic station building in RCT3
Factory Building
Why are we bailing them out to "save jobs" when they have shown us for years how intent they are on shipping all of their jobs overseas. They've already eliminated like 80% of their American workforce. Basically, they're going to take 25 billion in taxpayer dollars and use a big chunk of that to build factories overseas so they can export your job?
And they're selling the same line of bullshit Chrysler used the last time we bailed them out-thousands of jobs, ruin the economy, ripple effect, blah, blah, blah. If we do bail them out-EVERY top level executive needs to step down first and the unions need to make major concessions as well. Unfortunately, that will never happen though. We have created a culture in this country of rewarding irresponsible behavior. Had a few kids You Can't afford? Bought a house you had no business buying? Ran your business into the ground? Decided to get lost hiking in the middle of nowhere? No problem, we'll just charge it to the taxpayers. Fucking ridiculous!
How to Make A Warhammer 40k Factory Building