View allAll Photos Tagged Modular
These are my modular buildings I've created several years ago. Most of these are already on Brickshelf but since I'm not able to access that account anymore I decided to upload them onto my Flickr account as well.
I still didn't have the heart to take them apart. I've even upgraded most of them over the years. Here's a little back story on all of them (from left to right)
The Bank is actually the fifth building I've created back in 2010. It does not contain an interior yet (altough I have plans to make one in the future).
The Ice saloon is the third building I've built (2009). I wanted to do something different with the facade and the floor. It worked out almost as what I had in mind.
The Pizzeria was the first MOC I ever created. It was build in 2008. I've upgraded it a bit over the years.
The florist I build directly after I built the pizzeria in 2008. It has a interior on the first floor.
The Book shop is adapted from a moc from xueren . I've created it in 2009.
The left building is supposed to be a post office/restaurant in a typical Dutch style. It has no interior yet but I plan to create one. I've built this one in 2011.
If you want any detail photo's, just ask. I'd be happy to post them.
Discover the Medieval Modular Street! Seperate modules connected together to form 1 display. 2 modules with organic part in the border mark the beginning and end of the street. In between you can add as many modules as you like! Due to removable side borders, you can pin them together!
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.
My most recent design. It's an 8-piece glueless modular incorporating Japanese imagery referring to long life, prosperity and good will.
60° Origami Modulars (Maria Sinayskaya)
The same folding sequence applied to different rectangles - 2:3, 3:4, 2:√3 and 1:1. The square version, although works in terms of angles and pattern, doesn't quite work in terms of layers - there is too much paper inside. Everything else from about 2:3 to the double bronze rectangle works fine.
Anna, Susanna and other stars (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 8 units, no glue
Origami paper by Peter Keller in turquoise and metallic copper.
5 cm squares, 50 gsm
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. ideas.lego.com/projects/148797
Simple modular flowers
Designer: Natalia Romanenko
Units: 5
Paper: square 7.5 cm
Final size: ~ 9 cm
Joint: no glue
my lego street consisting of the Pet Shop, Detectives Office and the Palace Cinema.
Detectives office was my first modular and my favourite so far. need a couple more tho and to start adding my own
Modular origami of the olympic symbols, designed by me, modified from 2020 Tokyo olympic emblem. 190 rectangles are used.
The facade of this hospital is modelled after Ullevål Universitetssykehus, which is a hospital in Oslo, Norway.
Made for the Modular Madness contest on Eurobricks.
My design for a modular train station. Lengthened and enlarged.
Here is the link to the main section: www.flickr.com/photos/94645638@N07/14534555239/
Two townhouses inspired by houses in Washington, D.C.. Each house is build as a separate 16x32 modular house. Fully furnished. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.
Simple modular flowers
Designer: Natalia Romanenko
Units: 5
Paper: square 6 cm, 7.5 cm
Final size: ~ 8 cm, 9 cm
Joint: no glue
New for 2017, Octan unveils its long-awaited nostalgia racing team featuring its all-new modular gasser chassis. While the cars carry no "offical" Octan logos or other branding, the paint scheme leaves no doubt who is unofficially sponsoring this team of young engineers and builders who concidentally all work together at said company. The fleet consists of the original pilot car, a 1955 Chevy; a mid-sixties compact Station Wagon of undetermined make, and a late-forties Ford coupe. The 55 and wagon feature flip-up front ends while the Ford simply needs nothing more than the hood removed. While these cars are not street legal in their race trim, there have been unconfirmed sightings of them at the late-night street races that absolutely never take place on Bricksburg's industrial West Side neighborhood on the first and third tuesdays of every month.
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I'd like to introduce the new modular gasser chassis that is the second in line with the modular hot rod chassis I debuted this time last year. The new gasser chassis features great flexibility to accomodate many different body styles as seen here. Wheelbase and ride height are adjustable in several ways yet they all share common mounting points. As with the hot rod chassis, wheels and engines are easily changed. The front frame clip can easily accomodate either fixed or flip-up front ends.The chassis is low enough that bodies can easily be configured to fit minifigs as these models all do. As a final note, the 55 Chevy is an update of a former build. Can you spot all the changes?
Thanks for looking, I hope you enjoy these as much as I did building them.
The old hotel burned down, but part of the facade was saved as a memorial to its grandeur. Behind the facade, a park has been built, with a statue and fountain. The residents of the Modular City love hanging out in this green space, which is frequented by buskers and performers such as the tarot reader.
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.
Two floor modular compatible building.
Instructions available on www.brickmonster.toys
Those who download the instructions will receive:
- 109-page professionally designed PDF instruction book
- Parts list with color picture of each part needed
- XML Bricklink parts list
Modular Vegetable Garden created as a central MOC for my city. Playing around with NPU building techniques en cool references.
HDR front shot of my synthesizers.com modular synthesizer, which I truly love. 200 pounds of amazing craftmanship for one single voice!
Bracketing with long exposure times, dark room - almost all light comes from the synthesizer itself.
Made it up to #13 on Explore (July 19, 2008)
I'm back baby! After a bit of a mini dark ages, I've been getting back into Lego, and now that I have my own computer, LDD is more promising an option than ever. So a project I'd wanted to do for a while is designing and making a modular police station that takes cues from 7744. So, after many hours of mood boarding, sketching, and actually building the thing in LDD, I present to you the first iteration of my Modular Police station. No furnishings as of yet besides stairs, but I want to adjust the foundation first before designing the inside.
This modularity means that you can build a huge variety of keeps- part of the goal here is that if you want, just by buying multiple copies of this set you could easily create your own theme, complete with wizards towers, palaces, fortresses and who knows what else!
ideas.lego.com/projects/5c1652fa-2e94-4a4e-a326-77a5592d770a
60° Origami Modular (Maria Sinayskaya)
rectangles 1:√3, 5 units, no glue
Shorter rectangles can also be used:
The inspiration for this one has been pretty broad. You could look at pretty much any new place in the general area and say it had a part in the design. The design was mostly spur of the moment "it worked" and "eureka" moments put together to form this monster. This is my newest modular, which doesn't have a name but could be codenamed Fortress NEO since the MOC named Fortress was "sacrificed" to make this, and much of the tan 1*3 brick and the entire baseplate from it are in use on the right hand, corner module. 3 stories, two divisions, ground floor has tenants for an Irish Pub, tapas place and a furniture store which, until I find doors, is "robbed" and will be host to a crime scene diorama. This will be the second centerpiece for the Christmas layout and a companion to the Overpass from last year.
NOTE: There were errors on the Sand Blue side of the tower that were corrected.
60° Origami Modulars (Maria Sinayskaya)
rectangles 2:3, 3:4, 1:1.44, 10, 12 units, no glue
Tried same construction method with different rectangles.
The first completed module for a Moon Base I'm working on. It fits on to an (unfinished) corridor section.
A lot of thanks to Pete Reid for pushing me to build a better design.
In response to a discussion started by AK_Brickster on www.classic-castle.com, I've been inspired to reimagine modular terrain standards like base8 and the Classic-Castle City standard. Here are some shots of a road I've built with some ideas of my own.