"The children thoroughly enjoyed the project and got so much
out of it. It fulfilled aspects of the D&T curriculum and there were
lots of opportunities for cross-curricular links. The children loved
working as a team and had to collaborate at every stage of the
process."
Year 5 Teacher
BUILD A STRUCTURE
Architecture Week for Schools:
Build a structure
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Buckminster Fuller invented the Geodesic Dome, the lightest, strongest, most
cost-effective structure ever devised. There are now over 300,000 domes in the
world, some of them the centrepieces of major world exhibits: Epcot Center at
Disney World in Florida. Geodesic domes are also used as "radomes" to house delicate
radar equipment in the Arctic, withstanding 180 mph winds. Fuller designed the geodesic
dome and other industrially-produced housing prototypes to counter the trend toward
resource-intensive, prohibitively expensive housing, part of his design to make
adequate shelter available to 100% of humanity. His structural designs were explorations
in providing solutions to global homelessness, both for inner city slums and the rural poor.
The Eden Project, St Austell, Cornwall, was designed by the architect Nicholas Grimshaw.
It comprises eight interlinked biomes - geodesic domes - which form the largest plant enclosure
in the world. The domes have been made out of sections so that they can be adapted to cover any
possible shape. The sections are made out of steel covered in a lightweight plastic (ETFE) skin.
The Great Court at the British Museum, London, was designed by the architects Foster and
Partners. The Great Court's magnificent 11kms glass and steel roof was designed by computer.
The 478-tonne steel structure, which supports 315 tonnes of glass has been built like a giant
jigsaw puzzle. The lightweight light-transmitting roof, complements the 19th century
architecture of the Museum.
RIBA Architect in the House
Find out more...

