
The walls are cut from
3.2mm cork tile using the Stanley knife. The long walls are 143mm x 40mm (to
allow the short walls to stand outside them and still fit on the base) and the
short ones are 100mm x 70mm. These are cut to a point for the roof. To do this,
measure each outside edge from the base up to 40mm and mark them. Then, find
and mark the mid point along the top edge of the wall, it will be at the 50mm
point. Draw a line from each side mark to the top centre mark and this will
give you your lines to cut to.
Cut out windows and doors. The doors are 20mm wide and
40mm tall. The windows are 30mm x 30mm. There is 10mm between the windows and
the wall top and bottom. And a 5mm gap between the windows and the door between
them.The wooden beams are made from match sticks and balsa wood strip for the
long bits. The window struts are secured with superglue, everything else is
held together with white glue.

The
base is cut from 9mm cork tile and faced with hardboard. This is a
different type of cork to the thin stuff and is sold as ‘wall cork’ or
‘noticeboard cork’, it has a much more open texture than the thin cork
but is just as resilient. I use it where I need a visible wall
thickness or (as here) where I want the texture to represent rock or
rough stone.
The base measures 150mm x 100mm.
The walls are glued to each other and the base using superglue.

The
roof is made from two rectangles of 3.2mm cork, each measuring 65mm x
165mm. Planks made from ice lolly sticks (tongue depressors?) are glued
to these with white glue. Lolly sticks are cheaper than modelling wood
and are pre-sanded smooth because they're designed to go into mouths.
Some of my buildings have a narrow tiled effect which is done with
cocktail sticks. Single ended are best, glue them on allowing the
pointed ends to overhang and saw all these off together once the glue
has dried.

The two roof halves are held together by a hinge made from masking tape and braced with triangles of cork.

Modelling
wood is used to cap the ends of the roof and a piece of dowel is glued
in the centre to fill the gap and add decoration. The dowel is cut at
an angle of 45 degrees to add more of an oriental look.

Add a front step from cork off-cuts and you're ready to paint. Total construction time, 32 minutes including tea-break.
