Build Your Own City

Why

Create your own city block! Be an architect and design downtown buildings for discovery and shopping.


Steps

1. Ask your parents or grandparents to take you on a walking tour of stores and businesses in your community. Note the interesting store names and products or services in your town. Ask store owners how they became interested in their work. Listen carefully to their stories.

2. When you are back home, choose several recycled boxes to create a city block of buildings. Use these boxes as patterns to cut construction paper to cover them with Crayola® Scissors.

3. Use Crayola Colored Pencils and Crayola Gel Markers to add texture to your buildings' exterior walls. Draw horizontal lines to look like siding or curved designs to look like fancy moldings. For texture such as bricks, place your paper on top of flat textural materials (door mats, sandpaper, or netting, for example) and rub over the paper with the side of an unwrapped Crayola Crayon. Glue the building exteriors to the boxes with Crayola School Glue. Dry.

4. Add roofs using corrugated cardboard or construction paper. Carefully peel one layer of paper away from the corrugated cardboard to create a rippled roof. Add shingle colors with markers.

5. Create window and door trim by cutting rectangles and squares from colored construction paper. Glue them to your buildings. Cut smaller shapes of contrasting paper and glue on top for doors and windows. Outline windows, design window displays, and make curtains or faces peeking out the windows with markers.

6. Fold paper and write on it to create doors that open, store signs, steps, or awnings. Use Crayola Glitter Glue for sparkling neon signs and gleaming doorknobs. Hang paper strip signs from overhanging roofs. Glue on your additions. Dry.

7. Make as many stores and offices as you like-imagine a whole city block!

Safety Guidelines

Adult supervision is required for any arts & crafts project.

Glitter Glue— WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD—Small parts. Not for children under 3 years. Not for use on skin.

Adult Assistance is required for this arts & crafts project.

Scissors—ATTENTION: The cutting edges of scissors are sharp and care should be taken whenever cutting or handling. Blunt-tip scissors should be used only by children 4 years and older. Pointed-tip scissors should be used only by children 6 years and older.

Related Crafts

Crafts

 

Supplies

crayola supplies
  • Crayons
  • Colored Pencils
  • Gel Markers
  • No-Run School Glue
  • Glitter Glue
  • Blunt-Tip Scissors
  • Construction Paper
household supplies
  • recycled boxes
  • corrugated cardboard
  • textured items (optional)

Where & When

"On Grandparents Day, my parents showed their grandchildren where their favorite Mideastern bakery used to be."
Gideon L., father of three.

"We added storekeepers, such as Señor Gonzalez and Mrs. Singh, to our city block project for the public library."
Ibi P., scout leader.


Interesting Info

Shoppers today pay for purchases with paper and coins. Thousands of years ago, people paid with cows, sheep, and camels. More recently, cowries (mollusk shells) were used to pay for goods. In fact, cowrie shells are the most widely and longest-used currency in history.