Life Size Monopoly Board Game
. Monopoly can be a viable training tool for success in the real estate market. The game is much like real life – walking down blocks, passing different train stations and neighborhoods, seeing the Water Works in the distance. So it's kind of appropriate that a street artist in Chicago has been installing elements of the board onto the actual streets of the city.
I noticed this bit of the game - stack of Community Chest cards - outside of a restaurant in the Logan Square area on a recent visit in the city. A few blocks away, I found this stack of Chance cards. Both are secured to the sidewalk. The card reads: 'Carissa, will you marry me? If yes, advance one block south to nearest church.' Nobody at the one block south seemed to know of any marriages or successful proposals. From the local blog Avoision theorizes that it's just part of the art.
Life Size Monopoly Board Game
The community of the noticed a few of these in late April, and based on of the Community Chest cards the text is periodically changed. Elsewhere there's also a and with two houses. All this made me wonder about bringing a full-sized version of a game like Monopoly to the actual streets. I'm not talking just a bigger version of the game – which is in a park in San Jose, California. Rather, I imagine that the common block-like board game layout could be transposed onto actual city blocks. We already know the format, and we already have the city blocks, so why not? If anybody's done this or has some ideas on how it could work, I'd love to hear.
Giant Monopoly Board Floor
The board game Monopoly has its origin in the early 20th century. The earliest known version of Monopoly, known as The Landlord's Game, was designed by an American, Elizabeth Magie, and first patented in 1904 but existed as early as 1902. Magie, a follower of Henry George, originally intended The Landlord's Game to illustrate the economic consequences of Ricardo's Law of Economic rent and the.

Photo credit: Nate Berg About the Author.