‘Dr Who’ Police Box Plans
It is a very solid structure suitable not only for show, but also for many practical uses. It is big and strong enough to be used as a garden shed
$5.00
This is a downloadable PDF file.
How to build a London Police Box.
There are 56 pages in the downloadable file, including plans, drawings, photos, and step-by-step instructions.
It is my take on the 1929 Mackenzie Trench design police watch box, very similar to (and the same size as) the Police Watch Box that sits outside Earls Court Railway Station in London.
The police box outside Earl’s Court tube station in London was built in 1997 and based on the 1929 Mackenzie Trench design.
It is not a prop.
It is a very solid structure suitable not only for show, but also for many practical uses. It is big and strong enough to be used as a garden shed to store garden tools etc., and it can be transformed into a cattery, a pool side changing shed, or any other type of quirky rendition that could be limited only by your imagination.
This is a full-size version very similar to the police box outside Earl’s Court tube station in London.
The plans are written in both standard (inch) and metric (millimetre) measurements.
It is designed for outside use. The corner pillars alone could just about hold up a house.
It is made in sections that can be dismantled if it ever needs to be moved.
The footprint is 1430 mm (57¼”) square and it stands 2700 mm (9 ft) tall.
Help is in the form of user-input and the URL for the user/comments page is given in the documentation in the downloadable file.
ROBIN BAKER –
Thank you so much for posting this!! My husband has been promising me for years now that he would build a TARDIS for me as my 50th birthday gift (I’ll be 56 in June), but used the excuse that he wants it to be just perfect and can’t do that without either seeing one in person ( not too easy in Colorado) or having plans//blueprints in hand. You’ve made my year!!! ?
Thanks so much again! You’re fantastic!
TOMER FEINER –
Got tips on obtaining a fresnel globe at the right dimensions? Almost everything I can find is a replacement lens for a Perko lamp which is about half as tall and wide as a typical TARDIS one would be.