Before we get started, I'll mention the three archived newsletters from my
long-gone Girder and Panel Club.
Take a look at some of the back newsletters if you are really into Girder and
Panel details and history.
Girder and Panel
News Issue #1 contains an listing of all the sets with suggested prices
Girder and Panel
News Issue #2 describes the Hydrodynamic sets in detail
Girder and Panel
News Issue #3 describes the different colors of girders and beams; the Girdermatic sets
Please note: , as suggested in my archived newsletters. None are published any more. The "club" no longer exists !!!
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The initial Girder and Panel sets were inspired by the construction of a new
office building in Cincinnati, OH, home of Kenner Toys. Kenner president
Alfred Steiner was intrigued by the modern steel beam and girder structure of
the new building, and the steel and glass wall panels that were later applied
to that framework. This led to the development of girder and panel
construction sets.
Most adults today who had Girder and Panel sets back in the 1960s remember the famous building and turnpike sets. The sets were unforgetably characterized by hundreds of red plastic girders and beams, green masonite baseboards, yellow electric motors and pulleys, grey plastic road pieces, and bright orange, yellow, and brown plastic wall panels. The all-time best-selling set was the motorized #8 set: Combined Girder-and-Panel Bridge-and-Turnpike set Somewhat lesser known are the Skyrail sets (#17 and #18), which had a battery powered monorail run from building to building on a steel electrified rail, and the Hydrodynamic sets (#11 and #12), which consisted of 1 or 2 motorized pumps in a large flat plastic tank, and many many different types of devices and tanks which transported water. The concept was that the base tank unit served as the foundation to a Girder and Panel factory building. As large new subdivisions started to spring up around cities in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Kenner reflected the trend in the Subdivision sets (#14, #15, and #16) which built brick or colonial-clapboard homes, with patios, swimming pools, barbecue pits, TV antennas, and landscaping.
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Sales catalog page from 1965 |
Sales catalog page from 1965 |
As even more modern steel and glass buildings appeared in cities and industrial parks, Kenner updated the older girder and panel theme with the Modern As Tomorrow sets (#21, #22, and #23), which included curved glass entrances, a new type of opaque painted wall panel, modern stylist roof panels, and interior office panels. They also started to package the smaller sets in tall "cans" made of cardboard with metal or plastic tops. Parents must have appreciated this space-saving move, as the older sets such as #8, Hydrodynamic and Skyrail were to large they could only fit under a bed!! Set #26 was the last of the wide flat box sets. |
Least known (and probably least seen today) were the last 2 sets of the original Girder and Panel series, called the Girdermatic sets (set #32 and #33). All sorts of unusual pieces never seen before in any other Girder and Panel set were introduced. Girdermatic would build conveyor systems, double-motorized gantry cranes, oil derricks, amusement park rides such as a ferris wheel, etc. The masonite plates were replaced with apple-green metal straps (weird!), and the motors were mounted in a new apple-green housing. If you like, take a side trip to a look at the Girdermatic full color project book. |
This is the 1100 piece Girder and Panel Sears Tower Set, #72001. It is often confused with the World Famous Buildings set #72011, which had 700 pieces, and which is quite easy to find. |
Kenner went through a lot of changes as a company in the late 1960s.
The company was purchased by the General Mills Fun Group, a division of
the famous breakfast cereal company. General Mills was on a buying spree
in those years, and even purchased the famous Lionel Electric Train Company,
which was now in bankruptcy.
Girder and Panel production had stopped by 1968, and the line was dormant for the next 6 years. In 1974, the Sears Tower building in Chicago was finally completed. Kenner worked with Sears to produce a special Girder and Panel version of the world's tallest building. The set was priced at $25, and came in all black girders and black framed flexible clear acetate panels, making a very realistic 5 foot high model of the Sears Tower. These sets are very rarely seen, and bring prices upwards of $400 in excellent condition. Finding a set in excellent condition such as the one pictured to the left is a long and expensive quest!! |
| On the heels of the Sears Tower set, Kenner revived the Girder and
Panel line with a series of inexpensive (and arguably "cheap" quality)
sets based on the original idea. The green masonite base boards were replaced
with small interlocking plastic plates, containing the holes for the girders.
The wall panels were flexible printed acetate sheets, not the oddly colorful
orange and yellow wall plates. The sets had no motors, and elevators were
crudely designed to run on a plastic rod OUTSIDE the building !!
The following is a list of sets made when Kenner was owned by General Mills. Several of the Kenner sets were packaged for Sears Roebuck Co. under the name "Little Learners." 72000 Girder and Panel Building Set (1974, 340 pieces)
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Irwin decided initially to use steel-gray girders, and they added some interesting new diagonal pieces to make slanted roofs. Their initial release was three sets, entitled "Town Centre," "Cityscape" (also produced as "The Architect" for Canadian sales, and "Deluxe Skyscraper." All had an internal lighting system run by 2 AA batteries. These sets were on store shelves for the 1994 Chrismas Season, and it appears that the "Deluxe Skyscraper" sold well. The two low end sets sold poorly, so that Town Centre and CityScape sets are occasionally found below cost at some discount and toy stores a few years afterwards.
In 1996, Irwin produced a second line of sets starting with the Gas
Station set shown in the table below. These sets appeared to have very
limited U.S. distribution (for example, I only found a few at children's
museum gift shops, and a few at Lionel train collectors shows). They were still available
in Canada until about 1998, for example at Toys R Us "bargain aisle" in
stores in the larger Canadian cities. Some of the small sets actually include
2 little figures called Girder and Panel, with a small car for them to
ride in.
| Set Name | Set number | Pieces | Price |
| Town Centre | 55000 | 213 | $10 |
| CityScape (initially called
The Architect, in Canada) |
55120 | 298 | $18 |
| Deluxe SkyScraper | 55130 | 550 | $28 |
| Gas Station | 55101 | 133 | $15 |
| Fast Food | 55102 | 133 | $15 |
| Police Station | 55201 | 299 | $30 |
| Fire Station | 55202 | 299 | $30 |
| City Centre | 55301 | 591 | $50 |
| Emergency Centre | 55302 | 589 | $50 |

Same
image in full detail - 75K
Irwin's Girder and Panel Gas Station - Box Top
Note the French bilingual packaging, and the Canadian
gas price in litres

Same
image in full detail - 75K
Irwin's Girder and Panel Gas Station - Box Bottom
Top models show different ways to build the gas station
Lower models are examples of the other Irwin Girder
sets
I have a number of Girder and Panel sets available for sale, write with
your interests.
If you would like to contact me, send
me an email, or if you'd like to write a real letter, send it to me
at:
The Girder and Panel Collectors Club
P.O. Box 494
Bolton, MA 01740