The entries are in, and we have a whopping 16 entries this month. A new record, unless I am very much mistaken
I would also like to welcome Leanden, -3s- and RAD750 to the competition; and welcome back to some old hands
Now before we begin, I'd like to say that I will no longer be accepting entries sent to me by private message. Every month I have received one entry via PM, interestingly from a different person each time. It makes the process a little more complicated because I have to download and re-upload the image and it's better to have them all in one thread, even if they're posted right before the deadline.
Now let's get voting! Speaking of voting, I'll also be voting in the Australian elections...
-3s-
Papermill town
Chrill
We have steam, diesel and electric trains running in this photo too!
Emperor Jake
The small town of Mannville lies on a peninsula on the east coast of Tiger Island. Apart from the resort hotel that is a common fixture on the island, the town is also home to a scrap yard and a large oil refinery and chemical plant. Both the passenger and the freight lines terminate here, and there is moderate road traffic from both tourist buses and industrial trucks.
doikdi
Just a normal day for this small logging village, while the local cowboy is searching for his herd that ran away while he was having a drink.

ISA
Next to newly opened coal mine is a small community what supports different mines near by.
kamnet
The town of Baldwin isn't dwarfed by just one big industry, but three (and three small ones not seen)! From counter-clockwise left, the textile mill produces over 3800 crates of materials a month, the steel mill produces over 6000 tons of metal, and the livestock yard takes in over 5000 head of livestock to produce over 4000 tons of food per month. The area is serviced by 40 trains, 50 trucks, and also produces over 7000 passengers and mail every month.
Ladusa
Industry complex near Pražovice pod Pradědem.
Leanden
The massive Nowy Styl furniture factory inspired by the real life Factory in Rzepedz, Poland.
oftcrash
Hydroponic farm near the small colonial outpost of Terra Ladon. Security had to be increased due to thefts from subversive elements in the Free Mars movement.
piratescooby
Runtown the town built by Avonhall Transport for the workers of Runtown Smelter .Due to the recent Steel rush business is booming ,so much so an application has been submitted to the local council to expand the town .Workers are shipped in by air from the nearby city of Geningdore four times a day . Four new machine shops have opened in the region requesting Runtown steel ,can Runtown Smelter keep up with the demand can the Smelter get enough workers and can they get enough resources , time will tell .
Quast65
Too soon?...
RAD750
The steel mill in San Lorenzo al Mare is the biggest of its kind in the entire country.
The "worker's village" as it is called forms a perfect harmony with the heavy industry. The steel plant is served by an electrified railway: a steel coils train is leaving the plant while an empty ore train hauled by a new E.632 "Tiger" locomotive waits.
The main station being freight-only, passengers travel on a local diesel line. Regional train 21057 hauled by a D.445 is seen stopped at the platform, waiting to depart for Genova Brignole.
railman
A glass-works industry with the "company-town" for the working class in a railway junction.
romazoon
People from Glogow don t pay taxes anymore since the day they agreed to let the Iron Mines to be opened. As part of the deal they even managed to get a passenger train service. Glogow future will be bright they think,but little do they know how high the chance are that they ll end up covered by a giant wawe of polluted mud....
Voyager One
I don't know why but my towns just loooooove furniture...
wallyweb
Saint John is home to the largest oil refinery in Canada. Crude arrives from the middle east by VLCC at the Canaport docking buoy, the refinery's deep water port on the Bay of Fundy as well as by rail from the Fort McMurray, Alberta oil sands and the Bakken Formation in North Dakota, USA. The product is shipped by coastal tankers from the Courtenay Bay Oil Terminal to destinations along the East coast of North America, as well as by tank truck to local points. Here we see a GP9 picking up some empties to be parked on a siding on the far side of Marsh Creek where a pair of GP40s heads West with empties in need of a refill.
(I hope that's all of em)