
Mountain Living Model Kit
Save 41%Explore mountain landscapes and freely build with the Arckit Mountain Living kit. Create your ultimate collection of colourful and modern alpine house style designs reflecting the challenging lifestyle in mountainous terrain.
Overview
The Arckit Mountain Living scale model building kits lets you build atop cliffs of imagination from the comfort of your home! (Scale 1:50 / 1/4)
Ideal for Budding architects from age 7 years old to create and learn about life in the mountains, from casting to camping, bunnies to bears.
The Arckit Mountain Living building kit comes with:
- 87 x Arckit pcs. (Architectural building blocks).
- 22 x Arckit Mountain cardboard pop-outs (including figurines & vegetation).
Add more cardboard pop-outs. - Introductory booklet with fun and educational facts about the mountainous regions, sketching & planning page and step by step instructions for 1 design.
- Features a pitched roof design set.
- 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.
- Access to Arckit Universe.
- Package Dimensions: 300x50x220mm
- Recommended for age 7+
And remember that all Arckit construction sets are compatible with one another!
Get Inspired

Begins a process of combining Portenta H7 with Vision Shield – LoRa by acquiring, sending, and displaying a camera image via USB/Serial connection.

Jeremy Ellis is a teacher, and as such, wanted a longer-term project that his students could do to learn more about microcontrollers and computer vision/machine learning, and what better way is there than a self-driving car. His idea was to take an off-the-shelf RC car which uses DC motors, add an Arduino Portenta H7 as the MCU, and train a model to recognize target objects that it should follow. After selecting the “RC Pro Shredder” as the platform, Ellis implemented a VNH5019 Motor Driver Carrier, a servo motor to steer, and a Portenta H7 + Vision Shield along with a 1.5” OLED module. After 3D printing a small custom frame to hold the components in the correct orientation, nearly 300 images were collected of double-ringed markers on the floor. These samples were then uploaded to Edge Impulse and labeled with bounding boxes before a FOMO-based object detection model was trained. Rather than creating a sketch from scratch, the Portenta community had already developed one that grabs new images, performs inferencing, and then steers the car’s servo accordingly while optionally displaying the processed image on the OLED screen. With some minor testing and adjustments, Ellis and his class had built a total of four autonomous cars that could drive all on their own by following a series of markers on the ground. For more details on the project, check out Ellis' Edge Impulse tutorial here.