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This is actually what I wore for my stage presentation.

FOXBOT - created for competition

[MOC] Mercedes Benz Actros Truck-Lego Delivery Service

In the future a new earth-like planet - named Ademis - is discovered. A group of people with different skills is sent to Ademis to live there and examine the pre-conditions for a larger colony to be established.

 

This is a health care module with a garden passage, examination area, treatment room and surgery room.

 

My previous MOC Part I is a habitat example module. My aim is to build further example modules to visualize the various functions of the colony.

About one year ago I published pictures of this MOC for the first time. My first modern home. Since then I've built many and it has become "my thing". A couple of days ago I looked at my old photos of Green Rock House and wasn't really satisfied with them. That is the reason I now publish some shots with better light setting.

 

#throwbackthursday #tbt

...

 

Green Rock House - a build based on a vision of a sustainable and modern home close to nature.

 

Green Rock House is divided into three parts connected with hinges and technic pins. The roof of each floor can be taken off.

 

The house has full interior with a living room, kitchen, bedroom, music corner, bathroom and gym.

The client requested that this piece be built in modules.

 

Celebrating the cyberpunk genre, style, and mythos.

Brickworld ended a whole three months ago ...better late than never?

 

Thank you to everyone for making this another incredible year. Insert the usual mushy gushy lovey dovey sweet sentiment here to the new friends, the old ones, and those who didn't show this year and we missed ♥! Hard to come up with a new way to describe it year over year.

 

2025 kept me busy with running a workshop, a presentation, being on a panel, being in Frog Nation collab (#phrog - we got a nomination!) and the Rolli Pollie collab (we got a nomination!), and of course, the film festival. This year I tried to take a healthy step back from my commitments at the show which included barely making any new MOCs. The comeback will be crazy :)

 

My indefinite sabbatical from LEGO is still ongoing but I'm finally posting my backlog.

 

More photos and info on my IG: www.instagram.com/p/DOWOG79jz7d/?img_index=1

Display at Skockani AFOL exhibition. Learn more at BrickSamurai.

This past weekend I celebrated my 18th birthday. This meant crossing the threshold between a TFOL to a full-fledged AFOL, or Adult Fan of Lego. In March of 2006, I created my first account on a Lego fan site, the since deceased Minifig Customization Network. From there I was introduced to the incredible online community of both minifig customizers and Lego builders, and began to fill my own Brickshelf page. My first few years online were mainly spent sculpting helmets and custom pieces, and drawing decals in Photoshop and Illustrator. It was Lego that pushed me to teach myself such programs, as well as develop an interest in Photography. In 2008 I would travel to Seattle to attend my first Lego convention, BrickCon. Since then I have traveled across the country to five conventions over the past three years, meeting some of my closest friends and participating in huge collaborative builds.

 

This past June I graduated from High School, finished my last cross country and volleyball seasons, earned my Eagle Scout award, and will be attending Brigham Young University in the fall. As an admission essay, I wrote the following;

 

1. Describe any special interests and/or passions and give examples of how you have developed knowledge and/or creativity in these areas.

 

200 words or less

By the time I started high school, it was clear I wasn’t destined to be a typical teen. Teenagers are not supposed to play with Lego. But, like the tiny plastic bricks themselves, something clicked inside me and building with Lego became much more than child’s play. Lego bricks became my medium of choice as I began creating intricate works of art and engineering. To my surprise, I was far from alone. As my landing craft, troop transports, and apocalyptic vignettes began to receive praise and publication in dozens of blogs and websites around the globe, I connected with the AFOL Adult Fan of Lego community, a talented group of artists and engineers who've reimagined what can be done with these deceptively simple bricks. When I attended my first “BrickCon” in Seattle, Washington, I met many of these inspirational builders face to face for the first time. Since then, I’ve been lucky enough to travel to numerous events from coast-to-coast displaying my individual works and collaborating on large-scale projects. With each experience, I've further developed my talents and my sense of self. Typical teen, or not, I’m a conceptual artist, building the world as I see it, brick-by-brick.

 

I don't know what I'm planning to do with my Lego when I get to college, but I know that without Lego in my life over the past 5 years, I would not have gotten to this point.

Taken from roughly the same angle as www.villaamanzi.com/media/com_twojtoolbox/p_0002.jpg.

 

Villa Amanzi is a luxury villa located on Phuket Island in Thailand. It was designed by architectural firm Original Vision (www.original-vision.com) and is operated by Paresa Resorts (www.paresaresorts.com). Details on the villa, including rental information (if you have a large amount of cash burning a hole in your pocket), are available from www.villaamanzi.com.

 

It features a 15 metre infinity pool overlooking the Andaman Sea, 6 bedrooms, and a contemporary modern design nestled into the edge of a ravine and up against an impressive rock face that penetrates into the house on multiple floors

 

Full set of photos available from: www.flickr.com/photos/rt_bricks/sets/72157638489626954/

 

Notes on the build:

Weight: 22.6 kg (50 lbs)

Dimensions: 77 cm x 51 cm x 59 cm (30 in x 20 in x 23 in) [96 studs x 64 studs x 61 bricks]

- Each floor of the house is fully furnished

- Floors are removable for showing the interior

- Everything is stud-attached (or other "legal attachments") except 4 cheese slopes for the fountain on the middle floor (which are kept in place by double-sided tape -- gravity will do, but this makes it easier for transport)

Blue Striped House is a U-shaped house inspired by contemporary Scandinavian architecture. Blue, tan and grey stripes. Small windows form irregular patterns and let the sun light create life in the living room, guest bedroom and dining area. All rooms have clean and modern furnishings. The house has three entrances through the living room, kitchen and laundry room. A windling staircase lead to the master bedroom upstairs.

 

Outside you may notice signs of late summer or early autumn. Brown, green, orange and red colours.

Baby bed with baby and rabbit.

My entry for the 'Decorate the LEGO House' Contest : Nature Category. This Forest Spirit springs forth from clear water, restoring and revitalizing nature as it moves throughout the wilds.

 

I feel pretty happy with it, especially since it is only my third Bio-Based build.

 

*fingers crossed*

This is our first tentative at building a nativity scene in Lego.

We faced many obstacles: colors, parts, ideas, etc. but we had really so much fun!

It's Over! But I was just too tired after the last week to even post any updates.

 

I'm really happy with the event, over five days we had over 700 visitors, and surprisingly, we had 53 contestants in our MOCing contest :D . We were aired on four national television posts, and numerous newspapers. I had a great time, the kids had a great time, and the parents had a great time, and would like to do this sometimes soon (just not with the same AFOLs ;).

 

Here is the gallery of pictures taken at the event, the SW display, other highlights, and children s MOCs

 

There are also pictures of the MOC posters that were at the event with the help of all of you. I just want to mention that in the end I had to cut down on the number of pictures due to the posters being small as they were. I apologize to those of you who can't find your MOCs on the posters, but your contribution is nonetheless appreciated, and it would be amazing to continue this kind of tradition at other events where foreign builders can not attend. Just a thought.

Classic Legoland Space from 1978 through 1987.

 

Monorail layout on baseplates equal to 48 32x32 stud baseplates, or 192 by 256 studs, 49,152 studs total.

 

85 pieces of original monorail track:

 

19 Monorail Track Straight Long (2671)

16 Monorail Track Straight Short (2670)

5 Monorail Track Monoswitch (2774)

23 Monorail Track Curve Long (2672)

3 Monorail Track Curve Short Left (2892)

3 Monorail Track Curve Short Right (2891)

3 Monorail Track Point Left (2890)

3 Monorail Track Point Right (2889)

5 Monorail Track Ramp Lower Part (2677)

5 Monorail Track Ramp Upper Part (2678)

 

47 different Classic Space sets (plus several duplicates and one Futuron)

 

6991: Monorail Transport System

6980: Galaxy Commander

6985: Cosmic Fleet Voyager

6972: Polaris I Space Lab

497: Galaxy Explorer

6971: Inter-Galactic Command Base

6951: Robot Command Center

6940: Alien Moon Stalker

6929: Star Fleet Voyager

6931: FX Star Patroller

6950: Mobile Rocket Transport

6930: Space Supply Station

6780: XT Starship

6928: Uranium Search Vehicle

6927: All-Terrain Vehicle

6892: Modular Space Transport

6926: Mobile Recovery Vehicle

6891: Gamma V Laser Craft

6890: Cosmic Cruiser

6750: Sonic Robot

6881: Lunar Rocket Launcher

6882: Walking Astro Grappler

1499: Twin Starfire

6872: Xenon X-Craft

6880: Surface Explorer

462: Mobile Rocket Launcher

1580: Lunar Scout

1558: Mobile Command Trailer

6846: Tri-Star Voyager

6874: Moon Rover

1498: Spy-Bot

6848: Inter-Planetary Shuttle

6845: Cosmic Charger

6847: Space Dozer

6824: Space Dart I

6842: Small Space Shuttle Craft

6844: Sismobile

6825: Cosmic Comet

6820: Starfire I

6822: Space Digger

6826: Crater Crawler

6802: Space Probe

6805: Astro Dasher

6807: (Unnamed)

6823: Surface Transport

1557: Scooter

6803: Space Patrol

6806: Surface Hopper

Classic Legoland Space from 1978 through 1987.

 

Monorail layout on baseplates equal to 48 32x32 stud baseplates, or 192 by 256 studs, 49,152 studs total.

 

85 pieces of original monorail track:

 

19 Monorail Track Straight Long (2671)

16 Monorail Track Straight Short (2670)

5 Monorail Track Monoswitch (2774)

23 Monorail Track Curve Long (2672)

3 Monorail Track Curve Short Left (2892)

3 Monorail Track Curve Short Right (2891)

3 Monorail Track Point Left (2890)

3 Monorail Track Point Right (2889)

5 Monorail Track Ramp Lower Part (2677)

5 Monorail Track Ramp Upper Part (2678)

 

47 different Classic Space sets (plus several duplicates and one Futuron)

 

6991: Monorail Transport System

6980: Galaxy Commander

6985: Cosmic Fleet Voyager

6972: Polaris I Space Lab

497: Galaxy Explorer

6971: Inter-Galactic Command Base

6951: Robot Command Center

6940: Alien Moon Stalker

6929: Star Fleet Voyager

6931: FX Star Patroller

6950: Mobile Rocket Transport

6930: Space Supply Station

6780: XT Starship

6928: Uranium Search Vehicle

6927: All-Terrain Vehicle

6892: Modular Space Transport

6926: Mobile Recovery Vehicle

6891: Gamma V Laser Craft

6890: Cosmic Cruiser

6750: Sonic Robot

6881: Lunar Rocket Launcher

6882: Walking Astro Grappler

1499: Twin Starfire

6872: Xenon X-Craft

6880: Surface Explorer

462: Mobile Rocket Launcher

1580: Lunar Scout

1558: Mobile Command Trailer

6846: Tri-Star Voyager

6874: Moon Rover

1498: Spy-Bot

6848: Inter-Planetary Shuttle

6845: Cosmic Charger

6847: Space Dozer

6824: Space Dart I

6842: Small Space Shuttle Craft

6844: Sismobile

6825: Cosmic Comet

6820: Starfire I

6822: Space Digger

6826: Crater Crawler

6802: Space Probe

6805: Astro Dasher

6807: (Unnamed)

6823: Surface Transport

1557: Scooter

6803: Space Patrol

6806: Surface Hopper

Two dots bracelets make up the internal structure of the keg

NCC-1701-D in a smaller scale.

Scandinavian Sea House MOC is a small - but functional - house by the sea. It is shaped like an L and located somewhere in the Swedish archipelago. Downstairs you find a small TV-room and kitchen next to a guest room and a laundry room. A storage space is hidden underneath the staircase, that leads up to the master bedroom. And now we come to the best part - the home spa! Here you find a Turkish bath and resting chairs in a peaceful environment with a panorama sea view. Double glass doors lead to the roof terrace outside.

Built to be included in future version of New Hashima / Neo Atlanta collaboration.

 

More photos/videos on Instagram @brickcityplanner

My Emmet Collection!

My take on an eye-borg version of Marvin. Retro blaster is from Brickarms.

Pirates Lego MOC with downsized Imperial Flagship

Missed this the first time around. I had been collecting parts, but was able to pick up the official set during a re-release. I still have two alternatives to build when I finally collect all the parts.

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