Biscuit Sculptures in Singapore

September 3, 2007 | by John | Filed Under Design, Food |

biscuit-sculptures-in-singapore

Biscuit-maker Jacob’s is hoping for a place in the Singapore Book of Records with the ‘Largest Sculpture Made of Biscuits.’

The feat sits on a platform measuring about 6 x 1.2 meters, and more than 24,000 biscuits from 13 varieties are used.

It includes the Eiffel Tower, the Great Pyramid of Giza, the Tower Bridge of London, the Great Wall of China, the Taj Mahal, Malaysia’s Petronas Twin Towers and even Singapore’s very own Esplanade.

The tallest “building” – the Petronas – is over two meters high.

See below for pictures of the sculptures!

biscuits

The Petronas

b8

The Taj Mahal

b7

The Great Wall of China

b6

The Tower Bridge of London

b5

The Great Pyramid of Giza

b4

The Eiffel Tower

b3

The Esplanade

b2

b1

Comments

2 Responses to “Biscuit Sculptures in Singapore”

  1. So uh dose anyone know how long it takes biscuts to rot? or in this case get so stale they can’t support each other?

  2. i’ll tell u the answer……the biscits didnt rot but 1 of them was eaten by a mouse at nights……and so everything fell on the mouse and the poor mouse had to die.

Leave a Reply

Who Sucks
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.