20 Innovative Dollhouses for a Good Cause
On November 11, 2013, the dollhouses will be auctioned off. Money raised will benefit Kids, a London charity that supports kids with disabilities and their families.
Famous architect Zaha Hadid submitted an abstract wooden puzzle house, which, as of this writing, was up to 10,500 British pounds (about U.S.$17,000) on the auction website. There are whimsical ones, a few puzzles, one that folds up to take on the go and another that unfolds into a blow-up play tent.
Here are the submissions. Which one is your favorite?
Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (AHMM)
This is another dollhouse designed for kids who are visually impaired. Different textures enhance the tactile experience.
The space is meant to be a weekend retreat, the firm says: "a place of escape that acts as a backdrop for ever-changing scenarios."
Zaha Hadid Architects
Wooden puzzle pieces form this dollhouse, allowing the user to create various structures and combinations.
ShedKm with artist James Ireland
This house, which rotates in pieces around a central staircase, combines a series of outdoor spaces that celebrate color, light, shade, reflectivity and long-distance views as important elements of stimulation.
Adjaye Associates with Base Models and artist Chris Ofili
This modern design contains a live-work space and a continuous ground floor that connects to an outdoor space.
Amodels
This tree house for dolls has it all: cars, a plane, a slide, Elvis! It's based on a real playground in Southampton. The purpose was to create something "as physically challenging as possible," the firm says, "because kids learn for themselves faster that way." But why Elvis? "That's a long story."
Coffey Architecture
A concrete structure, a bonsai tree and an herb garden form the exterior of this dollhouse.
Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands
Here rooms were composed and stacked by children with learning disabilities and sensory impairments.
Dexter Moren
This multitiered design appeals to touch, sight and sound on all sides, offering opportunities for group play or individual exploration.
DRDH Architects with artist Anne Katrine Dolven
This toy theater is based on 18th- and 19th-century paper toy theaters that were popular at the time. There are dressing rooms, scenery pieces, a stage and even working lifts and curtains.
DRMM with Richard Woods Studio and Grymsdyke Farm
This house, designed for a child who is deaf, features adjustable pieces for color expression.
Duggan Morris Architects with Unit 22 Modelmakers
This dollhouse fits with early intervention strategies for children with Autism Spectrum Disorders. The creators consulted with a mother of a high-functioning autistic child for the design, which features stackable rooms that can be dismantled into single spaces for focused play.
FAT Architecture with artist Grayson Perry
This is a miniature remake of Balfron Tower, a housing block in London designed by architect Erno Goldfinger. High design supports fantasy play here.
Guy Hollaway with Hemingway Design
"This is not a dollhouse," reads a message on the roof of this simple, colorful box.
HLM with JuJu Ross Design and A&J Hilliard Cabinet Makers
A marble runs through this tower structure, creating acoustic responses that help visually impaired kids process spatial images.
Glenn Howells Architects
A typical U.K. terraced house provided inspiration for this dollhouse. Durable wood construction allows visually impaired kids to feel and understand how volumes relate to living.
Studio Egret West with Andrew Logan
Seven separate hollow spaces each contain a jewelry-like object designed by artist Andrew Logan: a stair of mirrors, a ladder, a diving board, thimbles, a chain and a propeller. When not in use, the house completely folds up into a colorful rectangular box.
Mae with MAKLab and Burro Happold
Bright-colored, textured panels that stimulate the senses can be stacked and stuck together to form walls, floors and roofs here in simple or complex designs, small or large. The pieces can be disassembled and stored in a traveling case.
Make Architects
A jigsaw puzzle inspired this design, which is made up of small houses created by various designers in the company's firm. Each designer filled his or her room with a personal interpretation of sensory expressions based on play and color.
Morag Myerscough and Luke Morgan with artists Ishbel Myerscough and Chantal Joffe and poet Lemn Sissay
Built from birch plywood, 3-D-printed coral, plastic, cork, cardboard, plaster and steel, this towering dollhouse is accompanied by a poem:
there's a place out there to the west of town
where nobody pushes no one around
a place where birds and fishes play
on a giant coral far away
where the sun is warm and the breeze is cool
and the sea is bluer than a swimming pool
you can play music and dance all day
on a giant coral far away
a house on a coral in the deep blue sea
a house on a coral in the deep blue sea
just imagine you could be
in the house on a coral in the deep blue sea