Design and build a model city using cardboard, recycled materials, and craft supplies; plan roads, buildings, parks, and basic infrastructure while learning teamwork and problem-solving.



Step-by-step guide to Let's Build a City
Step 1
Gather your teammates and give each person one job like planner builder decorator or tester
Step 2
Collect all the materials from the list and bring them to your work table
Step 3
Choose a large flat piece of cardboard to be the base of your city and place it on the table
Step 4
Draw a simple map on the base showing where roads buildings parks and other infrastructure will go
Step 5
Measure and draw building shapes on scrap cardboard using the ruler and pencil
Step 6
Cut out the cardboard building shapes with scissors while an adult helps
Step 7
Fold and assemble the building pieces and secure them with tape or glue to make buildings
Step 8
Position the buildings on the map and glue or tape each building firmly to the base
Step 9
Make roads by laying strips of cardboard or masking tape along the drawn road lines
Step 10
Create parks trees and decorations using recycled containers paper and craft items and attach them in park areas
Step 11
Test your city by rolling toy cars along the roads and fix any parts that wobble or come loose
Step 12
Share your finished city on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can we use instead of a large flat cardboard base or masking tape if we don't have them?
Use a poster board or several cereal-box panels taped together as the base and substitute painter's tape, washi tape, or thin strips of construction paper for masking tape to make roads.
Why do some buildings wobble or fall over when we place them on the map, and how do we fix that?
Reinforce the folded cardboard building bases with extra tape or a glued internal tab, press firmly when attaching to the cardboard base, and let glue dry fully before testing with toy cars.
How can we adapt the activity for younger kids and older kids while still using the same materials?
For younger children, give them simple decorating and park-placement jobs using recycled containers and paper while older kids do the ruler-measuring, cutting (with adult help), and precise building assembly.
How can we make our city more creative or shareable after we've built it?
Paint and label buildings, add LED tea lights or moving toy cars for motion, create unique trees from recycled containers and paper, and photograph or upload a video of the finished city to DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to Let's Build a City
Facts about urban planning and model-making for kids
ā»ļø Reusing and recycling cardboard saves trees and energyāturning old boxes into buildings is both creative and eco-friendly.
š° Ancient engineers built aqueducts and sewers; even simple infrastructure like pipes and roads can make a model city feel realistic.
š Architects and planners use scale models (common scales are 1:100 or 1:500) to test how buildings and streets fit together.
š¦ Corrugated cardboard is lightweight, easy to cut, and surprisingly strong, which is why model makers and architects use it a lot.
šļø More than half of the worldās people now live in cities ā your model city represents millions of real neighborhoods!


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