AMC 8 · 2000 · #12

Easy mode Grade 4
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Problem

Imagine building a long wall out of blocks. The wall is 100100 feet long and 77 feet tall.

Every block is 11 foot tall. Each block is either 22 feet long or 11 foot long. You cannot cut blocks — you must use them as they are.

Two rules about how to stack the blocks:

  • The vertical lines between blocks in one row must not line up with the vertical lines in the next row. (The joints are staggered, like in the picture.)
  • The left and right ends of the wall must be straight up and down — no blocks sticking out.

What is the smallest number of blocks you need to build the wall?

Diagram

A small section of the wall showing the two alternating row styles: long blocks fill most of each row, with short end-cap blocks staggering the vertical joints.

Whole wall is 100 ft long and 7 ft tall (small sample shown) length height 2 ft 1 ft 1 ft 2 ft 2 ft long block (2 ft) short block (1 ft) Joints in one row never sit directly above joints in the row below; the ends stay flat.

Pick an answer.

(A)
344
(B)
347
(C)
350
(D)
353
(E)
356

AMC 8 2000 problem © Mathematical Association of America (MAA AMC). Reproduced for educational use.

Try it yourself first — the explanation is most useful after you’ve attempted it.