Before there were professional building models and AutoCAD, there were Lincoln Logs, TinkerToys, Erector Sects, and Legos. Playing with those toys as a child may have led some kids to grow up to be architects, and playing with those toys as an adult may remind some grown-ups why they became architects. An exhibit at the Dallas Center for Architecture, Building Toys and Toy Buildings: Architecture Through a Child’s Eyes pulls together the toys we all know, and the toys we might not know: German stone Anchor blocks from the early 1900s, AstroBrite, Girder & Panel, and the first Barbie Dream House. The toys—alluring then—are still appealing now. Last-minute holiday gift, anyone? Through Jan. 4. • dallascfa.com
Architecture Through A Child’s Eyes
From blocks to replicate engineering parts, children and adults have enjoyed building fantasy structures for centuries.
Cason Hallock
An exhibit at the Dallas Center for Architecture, Building Toys and Toy Buildings: Architecture Through a Child's Eyes pulls together the toys we all know, and the toys we might not know: German stone Anchor blocks from the early 1900s, AstroBrite, Girder & Panel, and the first Barbie Dream House. The toys—alluring then—are still appealing now. Last-minute holiday gift, anyone? Through Jan. 4. • dallascfa.com