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Architecture on the Carpet. The Curious Tale of Construction Toys and the Genesis of Modern Buildings | Brenda Vale, Robert Vale | 9780500342855

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Architecture on the Carpet

The Curious Tale of Construction Toys and the Genesis of Modern Buildings

Author:Brenda Vale, Robert Vale

Publisher:Thames & Hudson

ISBN: 978-0-500-34285-5

  • Hardcover
  • English
  • 208 Pages
  • Aug 1, 2013

The intriguing book Architecture on the Carpet. The Curious Tale of Construction Toys and the Genesis of Modern Buildings offers a novel view of the development of modern architecture through the prism of children’s construction toys. Informative, opinionated and ranging across more than a century of toys and architectural trends, this 
book inspires an infectious nostalgia for these wonderful toys, many of them vintage classics.

The authors, Brenda and Robert Vale, discover a host of connections linking model-building sets with architectural movements, social history, and national identities. They investigate not only how model sets reflected building styles, but also whether they influenced the careers of children who grew up playing with them.

Some construction toys have looked to the past – Richter’s Blocks, Lincoln Logs and Tudor Minibrix, 
for example. Others have looked to the future: as early 
as the 1920s, the American metal toy Bilt-E-Z could be used to construct the iconic stepped-back skyscraper, like the Empire State building in New York. Later the British Arkitex and American Girder and Panel mirrored the steel-framed glass towers of the modern era.

The Vales show how the prefabricated engineered aesthetic of Meccano and Lego does seem to have influenced some notable architects. They draw out novel connections between model-railway buildings and modernism; model sets such as Castos and reinforced concrete housing; and even between the creative but slightly surreal Playplax and postmodern deconstructivist architecture.

The intriguing book Architecture on the Carpet. The Curious Tale of Construction Toys and the Genesis of Modern Buildings offers a novel view of the development of modern architecture through the prism of children’s construction toys. Informative, opinionated and ranging across more than a century of toys and architectural trends, this 
book inspires an infectious nostalgia for these wonderful toys, many of them vintage classics.

The authors, Brenda and Robert Vale, discover a host of connections linking model-building sets with architectural movements, social history, and national identities. They investigate not only how model sets reflected building styles, but also whether they influenced the careers of children who grew up playing with them.

Some construction toys have looked to the past – Richter’s Blocks, Lincoln Logs and Tudor Minibrix, 
for example. Others have looked to the future: as early 
as the 1920s, the American metal toy Bilt-E-Z could be used to construct the iconic stepped-back skyscraper, like the Empire State building in New York. Later the British Arkitex and American Girder and Panel mirrored the steel-framed glass towers of the modern era.

The Vales show how the prefabricated engineered aesthetic of Meccano and Lego does seem to have influenced some notable architects. They draw out novel connections between model-railway buildings and modernism; model sets such as Castos and reinforced concrete housing; and even between the creative but slightly surreal Playplax and postmodern deconstructivist architecture.

Brenda and Robert Vale, lifelong collectors of construction toys, are architects, writers, researchers 
and experts in the field of sustainable housing. 
They are both professors of architecture at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Their previous books include The Autonomous House, Green Architecture, The New Autonomous House and Time to Eat the Dog?, all published by Thames & Hudson. They won the United Nations Global 500 Award for Environmental Achievement in 1994.

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