View allAll Photos Tagged Modular
ideas.lego.com/projects/148797 This series of photos shows how the look of this castle evolves as you add and move small castle modules. Please tell Lego to make this a set by going to this link and clicking the Blue “Support” button.
At Seaspan Shipyards in North Vancouver. Building in progress for one of the Navy's new replenishment ships; this one will be the future HMCS PRESERVER. These ships are being built in modular blocks, and don't have a traditional keel that runs the length of the ship. I thought this photo would be of interest to students of Ship Construction; lots to look at with the framing and brackets.
Quite easy and quick build without any advanced building techniques. Can easily be expanded in height.
A modular school.
Building instruction is available at: rebrickable.com/users/peedeejay/mocs/
Every city needs a school! The build spans among 3 baseplates and consists of 10 modules. The baseplates can be separated from each other for easy transportation. The complete model weighs about 10kg and has 14417 parts.
The front part contains the main entrance, some trees and a bus stop. The roof areas contain the ventilation units, photovoltaics and the clock.
The ground floor contains the main entrance hall with washrooms for boys and girls. The right wing of the ground floor contains a standard classroom for maths and literature. The left wing of the ground floor contains the music classroom, featuring a piano, drums and some other instruments.
The middle floor contains a cafeteria, where the students can get a quick bite and some refreshments. The left wing of the middle floor contains an IT-classroom and it seems the students are well stocked on mobile devices. The right wing of the middle floor contains the science classroom. At the moment some experiments are ongoing in the chemistry class.
The upper floor contains the library.
A collaborative project between my partner and me. They design buildings in sketches on paper, I iterate them into LEGO designs matching the LEGO/Bricktober Mini Modular standard, and together we go looking for parts in local secondhand stores' bulk bins and then Bricklink the rest. We've done 4 so far!
Material : duo paper, 6 squares
Creator : Francis Ow
Instructions on his site
My "first love" with modular origami. I've made a lot of these stars.
This model is never boring, you can try many variations.
I posted a work-in-progress pic a while ago, but never got around to posting the finished sewer. Here it is. It's a little slimmed down from the WIP pic, but I find it very satisfying and playable. All the rooms are modular, so they can be linked together in any order. I took a lot of cues from the official Sewer Lair set, but wanted to expand it and make it a little bit more of a complete home for the Turtles, as well as accentuate the idea that it's underground.
Fiddling about. Also it was much longer but got cut off in the upload. Weak.
Full video: vimeo.com/40308179
Paper: 5 cm DC
Modules: 24
Model: Meenakshi Mukerji
Book: Origami Inspirations p. 16-17
Easy fold, nice stable model with tons of variations. Used two colours of dotted DC paper with the same dark green on the back side to arrive at a one coloured star.
Edit: Replace photo by a better one.
My modular book is now available on Amazon: www.amazon.com/Art-Modular-Origami-Joseph-Hwang/dp/B091NW...
My versions of the three latest Modular Buildings in Mini Modular format. Built in LDD. Rendered in Povray.
Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 8 units, no glue
An old design with a slightly different assembly method. Don't know if you can see the difference but I like it much more this way!
Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 8 units, no glue
More variations:
www.flickr.com/photos/goorigami/9034492498/
Modular Origami Stars (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 4, 8 units, no glue
The 4-pointed star can be braided on both sides to make a coaster:
LEGO modular post office.
6455 parts.
Building instruction is available at: rebrickable.com/users/peedeejay/mocs/
This was one of the most challenging facades I ever built, but I‘m quite happy how it turned out. Inside you can find also an architect‘s office. This gave me the chance to try some microscale building for the first time.
Tree technique by Ralf Langer.
Modular Star (Jose Meeusen)
squares, 8 units, no glue
Published in
Easy Origami to Enliven Your Life (Kurashi o Irodoru Raku Raku no Origami)
A couple of weeks ago, I got my hands on a 1592 Town Square set (Dutch version). I had to restore it a little, and then I got the idea to make a building for my modular street inspired by this set. So this is the result. A corner house, built in the middle ages, the last in its sort, next to the last remaining part of the city walls. Maybe it was the house of the gatekeeper. Today the space behind the gate isn't used as road any more, but houses a little snack corner, where you can eat 'soep en worst' (as in the original 1983 set).
Next to another modular MOC it looks very small, but that is to be expected from a little mediaeval house.
I haven't yet remade the statue and the parade from set 1592.
Mini Modulars
Designed by O0ger
From Left to Right
Palace Cinema, Parisian Restaurant, Detective Office, Pet Shop, Town Hall, Brick Bank
MOC: Modular LEGO Store. Based on the LEGO Brand Retail Store set that has been used as a giveaway at store openings over the past couple of years, but blown up to minifig scale.
And yes, I know that the original set isn't a corner building, but I just hadn't built one yet and needed one for a layout I was working on :)