Nice work Timotheos. I like your bunks, are they balsa? Well even Hadrian's wall came down, so must Timothy's wall.
The bunk posts are balsa--I found packs of flat-tipped light-weight "popsicle" sticks at the craft shop that I could trim to size with an x-acto (and a bit of muscle).
The bed boards came in a packets of pre-cut slabs that by coincidence were the same length as a figure.
To Gepetto:
I need to invest in a rotary cutter your described or at least a higher grade x-acto knife. My blade blunts fast and snags the top layer of my heavy card paper, often peeling off bits of the top layer.
To Rasputin:
Yeah. How green does my garden grow? Roman bunkhouse floors were dirt, or stone, or wood...
To Martin:
Heh, yeah, the centurion is getting a back rub. His "servant" sleeps in the small side room pictured.
Romans are really difficult to do right. Another example, mis-represented in my photos--Romans drank from bowls, not cups. The wine goblet that comes with the "Roman senator" is probably not correct.
On the other hand, Romans, judging by evidence from Pompeii and Herculaneum, owned upholstered sofas, much like the 1970s American style with the lightly padded black leather pockmarked with fancy nail-heads.