@pbacot said:

Wow. Great! Question on technique. Are these all done in the one file or are the building components from other files? Is it a large file or slow to work with?

Each city block is a component, the city is like one giant puzzle. The file is getting pretty large but because each block is a component Staunton still runs pretty smoothly. I don't design the blocks in Staunton since it would be considerably slower than making it in a new file and simply pasting it over. In older versions of Staunton, where I hadn't made each block a component, it took ages just to move around the city.

Not much new to show just a couple new filler buildings here and there, I did manage to bust out a couple renders:

The downtown waterfront on a crisp early morning.

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7430/11071234556_b1bc1bb107_h.jpg

Kent Plaza, surrounded by some of downtown's most prestigious office space.

http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5474/11071288753_31b1734421_h.jpg

Looking south from Ganton with the STA Bus Terminal, Union Station, and the STA Transportation Center in the foreground. The land left of downtown will be home to a low-rise neighborhood.

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3777/11071128175_aa6d7d90b3_h.jpg

The Staunton Bridge is back!

http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2829/11071221146_418439cd5c_h.jpg

The sun sets on Staunton's former tallest building, The Gloucester Building.

http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5541/11071241536_c8b529ab3a_h.jpg

The Jefferson Bridge is back also, here you can see the land where Fort Staunton park will be going, Staunton's finally going to get the big waterfront park it deserves, goodnight Staunton!

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3802/11071248094_c24f0a1c03_h.jpg