
Overview
Ideal for Budding architects from age 12 years old to learn all about contemporary architectural design while using advanced building methods and materials. Arckit A100 is the perfect STEM & STEAM educational tool for boys and girls to be enjoyed at home as a step-up from building block toys or in the classroom for school.
From finished presentation models, to building sections and open-top models, you can now can explore your advanced contemporary architectural designs and build ultra-sleek creations with Arckit A100 scale model building kit. (Scale 1:50 / 1/4).
The A100 building kit comes with:
- 188 Arckit pieces (Architectural building blocks).
- 22 x Reusable Arckitexture decals (including white louvres, light timber, dark brick and vegetation).
- 35 x Arckit cardboard pop-outs (including figurines, trees & furniture).
Add more cardboard pop-outs. - Features a pitched roof design set.
- 1 x Introductory booklet with instructions for 1 design, reusable box.
- A further 3+ alternative building design instructions are available online as well as lots more printable Arckitexture decals and Arckit inspiration.
- Arckit Digital components are also available to build via SketchUp and Revit platforms.
- Reusable storage box for components and accessories.
- Package dimensions: 350x280x60mm
- Recommended for age 12+
And remember that all Arckit construction sets are compatible with one another!
Get Inspired

Display real-time meeting room availability, synchronized with Google Calendar through Arduino IoT Cloud.

Watching back a slideshow of some of your favorite times of the past years is a great way to reflect on what’s happened and get excited for the future. The Electronic Cats crew wanted to incorporate this concept into a more simplified, interactive form which resulted in the Garrita project. Garrita is a homemade platform that lets an Arduino GIGA R1 WiFi with GIGA Display Shield transform into a highly mobile slideshow thanks to its larger onboard memory capacity and convenient layout. This year, the Electronic Cats were able to take their image shifter concept even further with Michi: an existing project that turns any conductive object into a capacitive touch-sensing controller. Whenever one of Michi’s inputs are toggled, the board sends a signal to the GIGA R1 WiFi that causes the current slide to advance to the next one. In order to go from a locally stored image to something on the Display Shield, users first transform their images into a more suitable format via the LVGL conversion tool. Once downloaded, the resulting files can be easily bundled into a Sketch before they become accessible in the application code. To see more about how the Electronic Cats built Garrita, you can read their write-up here on Hackster.io.