Armstrong Rubber Company Building Architectural Model
This architectural object is inspired by the Armstrong Rubber Company Building, a landmark of post-war modernist architecture in the United States.
Designed by Marcel Breuer and completed in 1970, the building is defined by its dramatic suspended structure, precast concrete construction, and bold two-part massing with a striking void between the base and upper floors.
Read the full Armstrong Rubber Company Building architecture guide
Modernist form, expressed through structure
The Armstrong Rubber Company Building is not driven by façade decoration or surface detail. Its architectural identity emerges from structure itself — a series of projecting floor plates that create deep shadows and a powerful stepped profile.
This architectural model focuses on:
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the building's suspended upper block floating above the base
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the repetition of concrete floor plates
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the strong horizontal rhythm of the structure
Reduced to object form, these elements allow the building’s architectural logic to be read immediately and clearly.
Why the Armstrong Rubber Company Building works as an architectural model
The Armstrong Rubber Company Building translates exceptionally well into an architectural object because its design is driven by:
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mass rather than transparency
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structure rather than ornament
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silhouette rather than surface detail
At reduced scale, the building reads as a composed modernist object — a study in how concrete, repetition, and projection can generate architectural presence.
Rather than functioning as a literal miniature, this piece captures the architectural essence of Breuer’s design.
Craft, materials, and finish
Each Armstrong Rubber Company Building object is crafted with an emphasis on precision and restraint. The finish is intentionally understated, allowing form, proportion, and shadow to define the piece — echoing the material discipline of the original building.
The result is an object that sits naturally within:
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architectural and design studios
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shelves, desks, and display surfaces
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interiors shaped by modernist and brutalist influences
It appeals to architects, designers, and collectors drawn to concrete architecture and twentieth-century modernism.
An object shaped by corporate modernism
The Armstrong Rubber Company Building represents a moment when corporate architecture embraced abstraction and monumentality as expressions of confidence and permanence.
As an object, the building becomes a compact study in modernist thinking — architecture reduced to structure, rhythm, and form, without reliance on symbolism or decoration.
Product details
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Subject: Armstrong Rubber Company Building, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
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Architect: Marcel Breuer
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Architectural style: Post-war Modernism / Concrete architecture
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Original completion: 1970
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Format: Freestanding architectural object
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Designed and made by: Chisel & Mouse
Learn more about the Armstrong Rubber Company Building
For a deeper exploration of the building’s cantilevered structure, concrete construction, and place within modern corporate architecture, see our in-depth guide:
Armstrong Rubber Company Building Architecture: Marcel Breuer's Suspended Headquarters
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