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(Yes, I know OSHA didn't exist until decades after the Titanic disaster, and wouldn't have had jurisdiction over the ship even if they had. The Title is still funny to me, given one of the photos below.)

This was a fascinatingly asymmetric stage, especially given that the deck this stage is going to support is not itself asymmetric. I think the way it's going to be built will require the asymmetry, but we'll find out. But I'm getting ahead of myself. Here's the mise-en-place.
The mise-en-place for 2.3.18, with two small piece plates. Also notable are the ten window pieces.

I started by adding a few internal supports, which you'll see two photos down, and then I built and added these two structures.
Two identical sandwiches. One of them has been fully assembled, the other has been laid out but not yet assembled. The bottom layer is a 1x2 yellow plate. The next layer up has two circular white 1x1 pieces on the outermost ends, then two brown 1x2 pieces with a bar, and then a 1x6 yellow plate in the middle. The top layer is three tan 1x4 tiles with one stud on each end.
Those two assemblies, along with some other internal supports, have been added to the build.

I built the next layer of tiny rooms; we're up to the upper decks, and this one is a mirror image of the same deck from box one.
Each side of the ship has a green-floored room, with a 1x1 gold stud surrounded by four red quarter circles.

Next I added some internal walls along the length of the ship.
The window pieces mentioned earlier have been added, three rows into the ship along each side.

I put in some more internal supports, asymmetrically as I mentioned above.
Supports have been added internally along each side of the ship. The sides are laid out differently and have different colored blocks.
Also interesting to note is this piece, which is only attached by the one stud in the center, with one end resting unattached on the flat part of the tan piece, and the other end floating over empty space. It will stay that way until halfway through the next stage, when more blocks are added on top of it that will attach it to the blocks around it. It was unstable enough that I thought I must have messed up, but I triple checked and everything is where it's supposed to be.
One of the supports, a 1x8 block, is being pushed down by a finger, pivoting around the one stud it`s connected to.

Finally I built and added the outer walls, and the tiles on top of them. When I make multiple identical sub-assemblies like this, I like to include these progressive build shots so you can see how they're built; in this case I think it's fairly obvious, but I also just enjoy posing the shots.
Four identical subassemblies in various states of completion. They each include an alternating series of 1x1 white blocks and tiles sandwiched between two 1x12 white plates, so the end result is a wall with windows.
Those subassemblies have been added to either side of the build, and topped with tiles and bench tiles.

That's it for the build, but there's three more photos. First, because of the asymmetrical internal structure, you can see different views through the top layer of windows on each side of the ship. The difference is subtle enough, and the views are abstract enough, that I don't think it's an intentional detail, but I thought it was still interesting enough to photograph.
On one side of the ship, through the top layer of windows going down from bow to stern, you can make out white blocks with holes, then brown blocks, then white plates, and then grey blocks with a gap underneath them.
Whereas on the other side, also from bow to stern, you can see white blocks with holes, then grey blocks, white tiles, and then some windows that don`t clearly show any specific blocks.

And finally, the photo that prompted the title. Sometimes during builds I notice internal views that I think are neat, even though they won't be visible once the build is complete. Here I know this isn't what the inside of the full-size ship looked like (obviously), and even if it was, it wouldn't have actually been built in vertical slices like these, but I nonetheless imagine this as an in-progress shot from the construction of the full-size ship, with builders in hard hats posed around, including a few on climbing equipment up on the walls and internal scaffolding. (I am definitely not an expert in early 20th century ship building, in case that wasn't already patently obvious.)
A face-on shot of the internal space in the build, which will get covered up when the next section attaches to this one. It`s an open but confined space, with scaffolding and other support structures running through it. About a third of the way up and halfway back, along the center line of the space, is a door frame that was added many stages ago as an internal support.

Thanks as always for reading! Discussion prompt, creativity version: In the Lego model, that door frame piece on top of the red block in the photo above is just being used as a structural piece. In the fantasy world where this is a full-size shot of a ship being built in vertical slices for some reason, does it serve some other purpose? Is there something inside that central tower running along the front half of this section?

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