Every day, artist Charles Young creates a miniature building out of paper and glue.

Young has built everything from humble cottages to oil derricks to rocket launch pads.

Young draws on hundreds of years of architectural history, but allows his sculptures to take on poetic dimensions.

Even minimal animations give the product a sense of life.

Vroom, Vroom.

Office building.

Gantry.

Bus Station.

Circling.

Garage door.

Animated elements added a new creative option to Young's palette.

Radio tower.

Young was trained as an architect, but treats Paperholm as a creative release.

Working with irregular bases forced Young to find creative, atypical forms.

Recent designs have evolved into surreal home/hen hybrids.

More recently, Young has been adding vehicles or all sorts to his structures.

"I really like doing the pieces with a lot of cut out detail, although they do take a long time," says Young.

"The ongoing daily project came from a desire to force myself to make something every day," says Young.

Lattice.

Beach house.

Crane.

Farmhouse with weathervane.

Spire.

Fire engine.

The first month of the series was marked by simple architectural forms.

As the series progressed, Young experimented with bases to add a random element to his creative process.

The most recent works feature moving cars, perhaps a sign that the series will begin to connect soon.

Moving pieces and animation became common as Paperholm expanded.