In the niche world of architectural model-making and collectible miniatures, certain production runs achieve a status akin to a "golden age." For enthusiasts of the renowned (though fictional for this exercise) Glenda Model Company, the consecutive sets numbered 59 to 67 represent such an era. Wedged between the experimental formalism of the early 50s sets and the commercialization of the 70s, these eight sets (59–67) are not merely a catalog of parts but a coherent philosophy in miniature. This essay argues that Glenda Sets 59 to 67 represent the apex of the company’s output, characterized by an unprecedented synthesis of modular logic, material refinement, and didactic purpose.
Glenda Model Sets 59 to 67 were not just toys or teaching aids. They were a manifesto for modular thinking, a brief shining moment when a company refused to sacrifice complexity for marketability. In their grey struts and red cables, they argued that a model should be a question, not an answer; a system, not a static image. For collectors and designers alike, these eight sets remain the gold standard of what the architectural model can be: a hand-sized universe of pure, constructive reason. Glenda Model Sets 59 To 67
Set 59, released in the spring of 1962, announced a clear departure. Its signature was the "Uni-Joint" – a universal connector that allowed beams to intersect at 30, 45, 60, and 90 degrees without glue. This small plastic innovation was the key that unlocked the run’s coherence. Where previous sets required proprietary parts for each angle, Sets 59–67 embraced a grammar of repetition and variation. In the niche world of architectural model-making and
Today, complete, unopened examples of Set 63 or Set 67 command thousands at auction. But more importantly, the design philosophy of these sets echoes in contemporary digital modeling software, where parametric components and constraint-based assemblies mirror the physical logic Cross encoded into plastic and nylon. Glenda Model Sets 59 to 67 were not
By Set 67, Glenda had achieved something rare: a modeling system that appealed equally to the precocious child, the engineering student, and the professional architect. Yet, immediately after Set 67, the company pivoted. Set 68 introduced motorized parts and pre-colored “scenery” pieces (trees, cars, tiny figures). While commercially successful, purists decried the move as dumbing down. Consequently, Sets 59–67 became the “lost classic” era – too complex for casual toy buyers, too perfect to be improved upon.