ALA Booklist
(Mon Dec 09 00:00:00 CST 2024)
Children are natural builders, and this activity book lets them channel their engineering abilities while learning about architecture from around the world through 20 different projects. Divided into three sections, the book begins with ancient techniques and building traditions from the past, including the pyramids of Giza, Stonehenge, and traditional Inuit igloos. The second section focuses on modern architecture, with such iconic structures as the Eiffel Tower, Sydney Opera House, and Sagrada Familia. To conclude, the third section moves ahead to contemporary architecture and its future, such as urban green-planning in Singapore, canopies from the heat and sun in Niger, and 3-D-printed, eco-friendly homes in Italy. In each case, a photograph and brief description of the architectural marvel provides inspiration for a related building activity. A list of materials (with household items and easy-to-find art supplies), step-by-step instructions with accompanying photos of children's hands in action, a rendition of the finished product, and extra tips assist readers in production. Discussion prompts and extension ideas encourage more connections and creativity at home and in the classroom.
Kirkus Reviews
Crafts projects made from simple materials echo aspects of iconic structures from Stonehenge and the Sagrada FamÃlia to a Zen gardenConfusingly switching from addressing children in some passages to adult caregivers in others, Seblon opens each entry with a description of the chosen structure alongside a not-always-helpfully angled photo. She adds several discussion questions, then goes on to pair terse instructions with photos or diagrams of the neatly assembled project at successive stages. The "little hands" (as she puts it) that are visible in some pictures will generally need help from adult hands to finish most of these projects-the rounded river pebbles prescribed for Stonehenge, for example, will be hard to balance atop one another, and the cardboard walls for the "Tower block box" inspired by Le Corbusier's brutalist Cité Radieuse ("Radiant City") will require more than the suggested safety scissors. Several will also require waiting for paint, glue, or papier-mâché to dry partway through before they can be finished off. Still, even if many of the completed models don't resemble the buildings that supposedly inspired them, they will require enough effort to satisfy hands-on builders, and more than a few could potentially exhibit spectacular forms and colors. The skin hues of photographed hands and Sae-Heng's small figures of painted children are diverse.Uneven but worthwhile. (list of buildings)(Nonfiction. 6-9)