Initial ideas
Future City Project (Grade 2 Summer School)
Theme: “Transportation in the City of the Future”
Project Overview
Students will work over 5 weeks to design and build a “Future City” model. Their city should include different kinds of transportation that help people travel safely, quickly, and in environmentally friendly ways. Students will imagine what cities might look like in the future and create buildings, roads, parks, and transportation systems using craft and recycled materials.
At the end of the project, students will present their Future City to the class and explain how people move around their city.
Student-Friendly Project Description
Welcome Future City Builders!
In this project, you will become an engineer, inventor, and city planner! You will create a city from the future. Your city needs:
Homes and buildings
Roads or pathways
Transportation systems
Parks or fun places
Ways to help people and the Earth
You will think about:
How people travel
How transportation can be faster and safer
How cities can stay clean and healthy
Your transportation ideas can include:
Flying cars
Solar-powered buses
Underground trains
Robot taxis
Bike highways
Hoverboards
Boats, drones, or anything you imagine!
Final Project Requirements
Each Future City should include:
At least 3 types of transportation
Roads, tracks, paths, or travel routes
At least 4 buildings or places
A city name
A short presentation explaining:
How people travel
What makes the city special
How transportation helps the environment
Weekly Plan
Week 1: Imagine the Future
Activity
Students brainstorm and draw ideas for a future city.
Mini Lessons
What is transportation?
Different ways people travel today
Transportation of the future
Maps and city planning
Student Tasks
Draw transportation ideas
Choose a city name
Create a simple city map
Materials
Drawing paper
Pencils
Crayons/markers
Picture books about cities and transportation
Chart paper
Week 2: Design the City
Activity
Students plan buildings, roads, and transportation routes.
Student Tasks
Decide where buildings go
Add roads, rails, water paths, or sky paths
Label important places
Materials
Large poster board or cardboard base
Rulers
Colored paper
Scissors
Glue sticks
Stickers (optional)
Week 3: Build Transportation
Activity
Students create transportation models.
Student Tasks
Build cars, trains, buses, or flying machines
Create roads or tracks
Add signs or signals
Materials
Toilet paper rolls
Small boxes
Egg cartons
Bottle caps
Pipe cleaners
Craft sticks
Aluminum foil
Tape
Glue
Paint or markers
Week 4: Build the Future City
Activity
Students assemble all parts of the city.
Student Tasks
Attach buildings and transportation
Add parks, trees, bridges, or lights
Decorate the city
Materials
Cardboard
Construction paper
Cotton balls
Tissue paper
Recycled containers
String or yarn
Paint brushes
Tempera paint
Week 5: Present and Celebrate
Activity
Students present their Future City projects.
Student Tasks
Practice speaking clearly
Explain transportation systems
Share favorite part of the city
Optional Celebration
“Future City Museum Walk”
Invite families or another class
Materials
Presentation cards
Labels for projects
Certificates (optional)
Simple Student Instructions
Step 1: Plan
Draw your future city and decide how people will travel.
Step 2: Build
Use recycled materials to make buildings and transportation.
Step 3: Create Transportation
Add roads, tracks, skyways, or tunnels.
Step 4: Decorate
Make your city colorful and exciting.
Step 5: Present
Tell the class about your city and transportation ideas.
Teacher Notes
Learning Goals
Students will:
Explore transportation and city planning
Practice creativity and problem-solving
Use speaking and presentation skills
Work with shapes, maps, and design
Learn about environmental responsibility
Cross-Curricular Connections
Science: Energy and transportation
Social Studies: Communities and cities
Math: Shapes, measurement, mapping
Writing: Descriptive sentences and labels
Art: Model building and design
Optional Extensions
Add moving vehicles
Include renewable energy ideas
Write a “tour guide” for the city
Create traffic rules for the future
Use LEGO or STEM materials
Suggested Recycled Materials Collection List
Ask families to donate:
Cardboard boxes
Paper towel rolls
Plastic containers
Bottle caps
Cereal boxes
Egg cartons
Old magazines
Small cartons