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BUILDER BOARDS
A Playhouse Kids build themselves



As a builder and newly minted preschool teacher I found children loved activities I was able to create from the world of tools, building and fixing. We took apart VCR's, patched bike tires, put faucets, flashlights and locks together and made things from wood. One day during this "shop" class I was watching kids play with Lincoln Logs and, for no apparent reason, thought, "wouldn't it be cool if kids could build their own playhouse, like big Lincoln Logs?"


It seemed like such a good idea (even if I do say so myself) I went home to my workshop and began experimenting. Logs were too heavy. Cardboard tubes and plastic plumbing were too awkward and ugly. What about notched plywood boards? I worked out the details of board length and notch spacing and made a some test pieces. Encouraged, I went ahead. Ninety-nine boards later, viola! A playhouse!



I took the playhouse to class and, made a mistake a more experienced teacher wouldn't have, by asking, "who wants to help build a playhouse?" Naturally enough, everyone did. Chaos ensued. Kids bumped into each other, walked on boards and no one could see which board to put on next. I discovered eight preschoolers were too many for one playhouse. But once we got down to three or so they were able to work together and plan their creation.

Eventually the kids got the walls up and were ready for the roof. In my excitement to test the playhouse I hadn't built the roof yet, so I got out a blanket. Big disappointment. The kids looked as if to say, "after we went to all this work to make this wonderful house you get out a blanket? We want a real roof." I had to promise to bring the "real" roof next week.



Although I was pleased with my creation, during the next two years, children taught me that it could be more than a playhouse. Using their imaginations, children hardly ever built the standard playhouse, instead building a house with two doors, and windows everywhere and a house with no doors or windows at all. Once they built a house with a tunnel entrance and a flat roof. After that came caves, castles, forts, towers, a reptile museum and a hot dog stand. The idea of building a playhouse gave way to the idea of building from a child's imagination.

Since then (1994) Builder Boards have undergone rigorous use in classrooms, at a summer camp for disabled children, and at Children's Museums. They always attract a crowd of eager young builders. Teachers and parents seem to like them as much as the kids. My current fantasy is to build a truck load of pieces, enough so a whole classroom of kids could build at the same time.

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Comments

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885 Posts
Welcome to LJs, Jack! Great invention and probably the envy of every kid that sees them!
 

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2,231 Posts
What a great idea, well planned out and I am sure to be around for a long long time, welcome aboard
 

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193 Posts
Welcome back Jack. Hope you inspire others like you did for us. Some of us took your idea to a different level…...
 

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13 Posts
Thank you. The guy who made it contacted me and asked if I would have any objection to him copying and enlarging my design. I've always wanted to see it first hand.
 

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4,324 Posts
Nice work Jack.

I built something similar on a smaller scale in 2012.

It didnt have anywhere near the impact of yours!
 

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122 Posts
Great work with those building components. This building experience for kids is priceless.
 

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128 Posts
Nicely done! Gives kids the respect for wood and the design process, as well as the outlet for imagination
 

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2,500 Posts
That is nice. the one thing I have learned from kids and grandkids is show them how it works and get out of the way. Their imagination will take them places you never even dreamed of.
 

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Good morning….....
 

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3,089 Posts
Great idea!!
 

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13 Posts
Your logs are wonderful. I hope you can manage to patent them.
Was there much sawdust created during the building of this project?
 

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Lots of sawdust but with a shaper that has dust collection its not bad.
 
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