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This is just a little preview of the new Lego-Architecture sets.
No credit goes to me.
Update: The sets are now aviable at shop @ home. Cklick here: shop.lego.com/ByTheme/Leaf.aspx?cn=627&d=70
I'm proud to present you this MOC in Lego Architecture style designed by one of the most important and talented AFOL on the earth, Spencer_R! Thank to him, I managed to re-build it in Lego Digital Design before and then with real bricks! :)
Here the original project by Spencer: www.flickr.com/photos/51130204@N04/7051638741/in/dateposted/
Here my model in LDD, already posted by Spencer_R: www.flickr.com/photos/51130204@N04/40715947353/in/faves-1...
Thank you again Spencer! :)
Based loosely on BCD Colonial Revival House instructions. Instead of it being the 3 floors of simple boxes, I've fleshed it out a bit, adding fully furnished rooms and stairs to the second floor and a pull down ladder to the attic (which is also furnished with a guest bed and a desk/office area).
This is the 21011 set of the Architecture series, but I have changed just the group of statues, on the top of the building! :)
Hi, I wanted to share my latest LEGO Architecture MOC: micro scale Machu Picchu! Here are a few links if you want to learn more about my MOC:
LEGO Ideas site (I appreciate your support 😁):
ideas.lego.com/projects/bee44110-aad3-43c8-87c7-f159d67e61b4
Instructions:
drive.google.com/file/d/0B9sXrECL6APVNW51RjFuaTVBVFU/view
Flickr Album:
Facebook Group: Lego Machu Picchu
www.facebook.com/LegoMachuPicchu
Parts and 3D Model:
Brown Version
studio.bricklink.com/v2/build/model.page?idModel=11343
rebrickable.com/mocs/MOC-8582/diegobaca/machu-picchu/
Green Version
Set 21013 was introduced in June 2012, just in time for the Summer Olympic Games in London a month later. For months, it was completely sold out at Lego's official stores and Lego's online store. After a bit of delay, I finally got my hands on it and built away. Despite being rather modest at 346 pieces, it consists of lots of small repetitive pieces and is therefore rated at age 12+; it took me 100 minutes or so to assemble.
The top portion of the Clock Tower under assembly. Once it is mounted on the tower, the assembly is finished.
Set 21013 was introduced in June 2012, just in time for the Summer Olympic Games in London a month later. For months, it was completely sold out at Lego's official stores and Lego's online store. After a bit of delay, I finally got my hands on it and built away. Despite being rather modest at 346 pieces, it consists of lots of small repetitive pieces and is therefore rated at age 12+; it took me 100 minutes or so to assemble.
Several different kinds of 1x1 bricks with different side stud configurations, as well as 1x2 tiles and 1x2 grille tiles suspended fromm the side studs, are used for the elaborate window configurations seen at the Houses of Parliament.
Lego's Architecture line includes a very nice rendition of Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, built in Mill Run, Pennsylvania in the 1930s and famed for incorporating the terrain and the waterfall as major architectural elements. The Lego version, rated at Age 16+ and consisting of 811 pieces, costs $99.99 and is a very nice 3-hour build.
A key feature of this set is that the terrain is one separate build, and the house itself is several separate builds. Here is the base of the house foundation and side walls.
📜 In a complete inversion of the historical timeline, the very first Imperial Baths complex (or "Thermae" as the Romans called them) to be designed for SPQR just so happens to be the very last one built in the Eternal City. The fourth century CE marked the twilight of the Western Roman Empire: a time when they were still capable of constructing monumental complexes, but were long past their prime, as evidenced in the Baths of Constantine which were adorned using statuary stripped from other monuments.
Don't miss these all-new DESIGN Insights post highlighting Phase II of my ongoing efforts to build all of Ancient Rome, circa mid-4th century CE!
😎 These insights are EXCLUSIVE to Corinthian patrons, and peel back the curtain months before these designs will be shared publicly. The renderings, on the other hand, are shared with patrons of all tiers.
Support this unprecedented project on Patreon!
Link below ➡️🔗⤵️
www.patreon.com/posts/design-insights-89625995?utm_medium...
#Artist #SupportArtists #SupportOnPatreon #FineArt #VisualArt #VisualArtist #SmallBusiness #SmallBusinessOwner #ArtHistory #WorldHistory #AncientHistory #ChicagoArtist #SPQR #ImperialRome #AncientRome #Rome #Roma #FestinaLente #LEGO #LEGOArchitecture #LEGOArt #LEGOArtist #InstaLEGO #WorldHeritage #Antiquity #GrecoRoman #BathsOfConstantine #Thermae
Besides the trees I've built a few scenes from the books/show like Stannis's army approaching, Mance's army camped in the woods, etc
This model was commissioned by Living Sky Casino in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada. It was unveiled at their 10-year anniversary celebration on December 28, 2018.
Model was built by MEEP Creative Agency (LEGO builder: kellyrev) in Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada.
The seven stone-cut murals on the side of the real building were redrawn and printed on vinyl stickers.
A 10243 Parisian Cafe`, heavily modified/MOC'ed. Changes include: additional seating outside, front and back; additional seating inside; access to the rear porch seating through the cafe`; bathroom; expanded kitchen area; a separate access path for the residence (not through the cafe` seating area); fully appointed residence (to include a galley kitchen, living room, and bathroom on the first floor, and the artist studio and bedroom on the second floor). The whole MOC is the compilation of 2-10243's (minus one of the kitchens - that went into the Asian Restaurant), plus a few assorted pieces from my own collection.
I have decided to remake my Bilbo's library Moc so that it can fit in the big Lego showcase (best way to fight against the dust 😅).
It was also a way to reduce the floor that was a bit too massive in the previous version. We have lost the woodbeam but they were very fragile.
I hope you will like this version too .
This build is part of a larger display I’m developing for exhibition next year, where I’ll be revisiting and expanding on the concept of Neo Fabuland—a reinterpretation of the classic Fabuland aesthetic, much like how Neo-Classic Space draws inspiration from the original Classic Space theme. If you’re curious, you can read more about the goals of the project here.
I currently have several builds in progress for this display, and this is the first one to be completed.
While not directly based on any specific Fabuland set, this watermill draws loose inspiration from 3679 Flour Mill and Shop. It features a weathered stone-and-timber structure beside a millpond, complete with a working waterwheel, lily pads, reeds, and rounded rocks. The water cascades over the rocks to form a small waterfall. I’m especially pleased with the textures throughout—the flowing water, the stonework, and the building itself—as well as a custom spreading tree technique I developed for this scene (and will likely reuse in future Neo Fabuland builds).
This build also showcases my approach to Neo Fabuland windows, using brick-built frames with vinyl-cut sticker panes to echo the distinctive charm of original Fabuland designs.
Far, far away the inhabitants of Cloudy Village live in peace totally unaware of the danger around them...
This is a nanoscale village located on a planet in a galaxy far away (or maybe in a distant future?). Three tall buildings rise above the rest of the houses. The top floors can be reached by using the glass elevators.
I started experimenting with round shapes in order to build something for the Archbrick Skyscraper Challenge on BriXtar, but my imagination grabbed me and brought me to an unknown place...
This model was commissioned by Living Sky Casino in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada. It was unveiled at their 10-year anniversary celebration on December 28, 2018.
Model was built by MEEP Creative Agency (LEGO builder: kellyrev) in Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada.
The seven stone-cut murals on the side of the real building were redrawn and printed on vinyl stickers.
Set 21007 is modeled after New York City's Rockefeller Center. It consists of 240 pieces, is rated Age 10+, and took me 40 minutes to build.
Foundation has been laid, with the sunken level of the Plaza (which hosts an ice rink in cooler months) already taking shape.
For my first Lego Architecture sets, I decided on three New York City landmarks. With yet another trip to New York City about to start in a week, I wanted to get into a New York state of mind, just like the Billy Joel song.
The very first two Lego Architecture sets, released 2008, featured Chicago's two most prominent skyscrapers, the Sears Tower (Set 21000) and the John Hancock Center (Set 21001). The Hancock, which failed to replicate the real building's slanted exterior walls, was discontinued at the end of 2011, while the Sears Tower set was renamed the Willis Tower, to coincide with the renaming of the real thing.
The Willis Tower is a straightforward build using 69 pieces.
The set's contents, including an instruction booklet that includes information on the real Willis Tower.
Based loosely on BCD Colonial Revival House instructions. Instead of it being the 3 floors of simple boxes, I've fleshed it out a bit, adding fully furnished rooms and stairs to the second floor and a pull down ladder to the attic (which is also furnished with a guest bed and a desk/office area).
This model was commissioned by Living Sky Casino in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada. It was unveiled at their 10-year anniversary celebration on December 28, 2018.
Model was built by MEEP Creative Agency (LEGO builder: kellyrev) in Yorkton, Saskatchewan, Canada.
The seven stone-cut murals on the side of the real building were redrawn and printed on vinyl stickers.
These are part of the LEGO Architecture: Towering Ambition exhibit at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC. Made by Adam Reed Tucker
Front elevation.
Expanded and detailed version of the original Lego Fire Brigade Modular building, with two equipment bays, an extra floor, silver bell, expanded floor plan, hose drain, 3rd floor, dormitory with bathroom facilities, and Fire Chief's office.
This set of five skyscrapers was created when I retrieved the bricks from my childhood. This model is essentially made with the simple primary color bricks from the late 1960's and early 1970's. The goal was to use ALL the bricks I had when I was a child. Created in 1997, it somewhat announced the end of my dark age.
This building is based loosely on one of the buildings depicted in the Brickbuilderspro commercial aftermarket instructions -
"Town Street," (www.brickbuilderspro.com/shop-instructions/?sort=featured...).
I tried to keep most of the styling elements, but expand the building to actually accommodate the idea that a minifig(s) could actually live in the structure, rather than just a box that was more facade than structure.