View allAll Photos Tagged legoarchitecture

A build based on a vision of a sustainable and modern home close to nature.

 

Green Rock House is divided into Three parts connected by hinges and technic pins. The roof of each level can be removed easily.

 

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

Interior of the family house. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.

Interior of the family house. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.

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.

medieval house inspired by the digital artist Guillaume Tavernier (aka De architectura). it was very fun making this really unusual house design where I was able to use many different techniques.

A modern tree house inspired by a house by A.Masow Architects. About 4500 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used. Reference images.

I have finally finished this Mid-Century Modern (MCM) house MOC. The building process has been slow due to struggles in "real" life and that is one reason I decided to call it Endeavour House. Another reason is that the television series Endeavour (a prequel of Inspector Morse) has provided good insight in 1960's interior design.

 

I've tried to include MCM characteristics such as large windows, a low sloping roof, natural colours, patios and a green garden. The interiors are also inspired by MCM design.

These buildings are based on certain architectural elements found in NYC. Especially the fire escape in front, a corner deli and neighborhood restaurants.

Lego bookstore modular inspired by A.Masow Architects concept store. There are four apartments above the bookstore. The modular house can be opened at the back and is fully furnished. About 6500 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used. Reference images.

Interior of the family house. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.

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.

 

I currently have several builds in progress for this display, and this is the second one to be completed.

 

This build is not inspired by an existing Fabuland set. It features a stucco rendered brick train station building with a tiled roof on a stone platform perched on a hilltop. The build includes a cutaway bridge underpass and rounded rocks as well as my spreading tree technique.

 

The train in this build is based on the engine from 910035 Logging Railway and 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.

This is one of the reasons I mostly do digital builds. I do not have enough bricks in the colors I want to use. 😂 This is a brick built version in plastic of the two townhouses I published a couple days ago.

Florence Cathedral finds a ne home...rebuilding what was previously done after the move to China

With this building I wanted to create a single-color house and instead of colors using a lot of structure on the facade. The building can be opened at the back and when fully opened, the two parts of the back expands the facade on the front and it becomes a 64 studs wide building. On the ground floor there is an architecture office and above that a large apartment. About 9700 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used.

Pièces : 2150

Dimensions : 63cm * 15cm * 14cm

 

In my more than ten years worth of work, this is the first time I have ever revealed the full design process for any project! Become a CORINTHIAN patron today to view the *entire* digital redesign of Eiffel Tower, and learn about how I was able to use parametric design in Stud.io to make this possible!

 

Link to my Patreon page ➡️🔗⬅️

 

House of Three is a contemporary Scandinavian family home. I've tried to catch contemporary Scandinavian architecture in colours, floor plan and roof design. The interior and furniture in inspired by IKEA and other Scandinavian designs. Comfortable living suitable for a small family.

This is my LEGO observatory. The dome structure can rotate 360 degrees. The flat roof and dome can be removed to see the inside.

You can help make it a real LEGO set by voting for it on LEGO Ideas:

ideas.lego.com/projects/c20b15b7-c37d-4313-ba1a-923d909374ae

Lego build of Mak Residence by Lars Langberg Architects. The house can be divided into several parts and is fully furnished. About 6600 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used.

Dutch modern city street. This street is based at my kitchen view :-)

 

Instagram: @brickisme

 

Rising to an unprecedented height of 137 meters (448 feet), the dome of St. Peter’s is the tallest in the world. The dome is an impressive 41 meters (136 ft) wide, although its span is slightly smaller than that of the Pantheon in Rome and the Florence Cathedral. Initially conceived by Bramante as a synthesis of both these precedents, the dome went through several major changes in design with each new capomaestro. Ultimately, it was Michelangelo’s redesign that became the final iteration, drawing on all that had gone before, including the implementation of a double-shell brick dome like that of the Florence Cathedral. The rather ovoid shape of the dome’s sixteen outer ribs dramatically reduces any outward lateral thrust, thus sufficiently directing much of the load onto the enormous four piers at the center of the basilica. On its visual design, Gardner once again aptly commented, “The sculpturing of architecture … here extends itself up from the ground through the attic stories and moves on into the drum and dome, the whole building being pulled together into a unity from base to summit.” While it can be cynically generalized that Michelangelo’s design for the dome ultimately looked backward at ancient and gothic precedents, it nevertheless heralded the architecture of the Baroque movement more than any other previous works.

 

As the visual focal point of the entire landscape piece, the dome was the first aspect of this project I tackled. Previously, I had designed the equally pioneering domes of Hagia Sophia and Santa Maria del Fiore, however, the shallow depth of the former and the faceted shape of the latter ruled out any similarity to the dome of St. Peter’s at the outset in their LEGO construction. The dramatic 200-ft outer diameter of the rotunda called for a 14-stud scale equivalent in the model. With so much room for internal connections to work with (relative to my other microscale works), I ended up using several 43mm-diameter wagon wheels to allow for thirty-two connection points at multiple levels along the vertical central axis. Therefore, in the spirit of superfluousness, my model’s thirty-two-sided interpretation of the dome of St. Peter’s is actually a triacontadigon!

 

The third LEGO skyscraper goes up in Wasabi District! At just over 3 feet tall and over 5000 pieces, this 10-storey building is the first office skyscraper in Wasabi District!

My mum wanted a Christmas House for her little scene she and my sister built.

 

In order for it to be done in time for Christmas, I had to rush it near the end so it's far from perfect, but I still like its overall design.

Singel 166 is a canal house in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. It is one of the narrowest houses in Amsterdam and the front facade is only 1.80 meters wide. This large scale Lego model is made of about 16000 bricks. Width is about 100 cm and height is about 90 cm. Some bricks have been chosen in colors that are not currently available to make the final result look more like the real building. Computer rendering.

 

Reference image.

Hey guys! I haven't uploaded anything in a while here, as Ive

With this building I wanted to create a single-color house and instead of colors using a lot of structure on the facade. The building can be opened at the back and when fully opened, the two parts of the back expands the facade on the front and it becomes a 64 studs wide building. On the ground floor there is an architecture office and above that a large apartment. About 9700 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used.

The Michigan LEGO users group has seen up another of its annual displays at The Henry Ford museum. It runs from November 14th until early January 2022.

 

From left to right, the buildings are:

1. Old Wayne County Building.

2. Guardian Building.

3. Detroit Life Building.

4. Carbide and Carbon Building (Chicago); behind no. 3.

5. Westown Theater.

6. Buhl Building.

The Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge is a bridge that spans over the Trinity River just west of Downtown Dallas. The bridge is designed by world renowned architect Santiago Calatrava, The cable-stayed bridge supports its 1870 ft length and 1197 ft main span with a steel arch whose peak's height is 400 ft. An array of twisting cables connect the underside of the arch's curved pylon to the bridge's platform. Fifty eight white steel cables descend from the arch and secure themselves along the centerline of the platform.

Model film on YouTube

 

Precedence: First-ever LEGO diorama of the full Taj Mahal complex

 

Parts: 17,600+ (~550 unique)

 

Scale: 1:650

 

Dimensions: 21in x 43in (53cm x 108cm)

 

Design Time: 120+ hours in 14 days

 

Build Time: 75+ hours in 8 days

 

VC: David Flores

 

© 2021 - Rocco Buttliere, LLC

 

VC: David Flores

A modern house for a family with kids. Fully furnished. Architecture is inspired by functionalism and clean lines. About 6800 bricks. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.

Lego bookstore modular inspired by A.Masow Architects concept store. There are four apartments above the bookstore. The modular house can be opened at the back and is fully furnished. About 6500 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used. Reference images.

My newest addition to the Wasabi District. About 3000 pieces and the size of a typical CREATOR Expert corner building.

 

Irish Pub on the first floor!

This build is created exclusively with parts from the LEGO Architecture set Las Vegas (21047). I got that set from my husband as a Christmas gift and couldn't help experimenting a bit...

وسط مدينة دبي ميكروبوليس

Part II, Digital

Arch was made with 1x4x6 window panels and rocker bricks to provide the angle.

 

The end result was sufficient for my needs, but I can't recommend this technique without reservations - it can require a lot of manual labor to keep the arch segments in sync. In hindsight I should have added more girders, but I ran out of bricks so I might do that in the next version. But it was the only way I knew (at the time) to make a barrel vault that wide and that long.

 

In my defense, this barrel vault is very long (more than 5 feet right now).

LEGO scale model of the Saint Nicholas Church and Corn Market in Ghent, Belgium.

 

Scale 1:500

Dimensions: 25.5 x 25.5 cm

~2500 parts

I am adding on the rear sections of the building to my model of the DPL. When complete, this model will take up a city block of 5 x 6 standard 32 stud baseplates.

One of the world’s most famous landmarks spans 244 meters across the River Thames in London, constructed between 1886 and 1894 by some of the Empire‘s most renowned engineers. Its iconic 65-meter-tall towers surpass the height of its namesake, the nearby Tower of London. The shape is not because of pure aesthetic reasons but was a technical necessity to accommodate the machinery needed to operate the moveable spans, so that larger vessels could still reach harbor facilities upstream. Though it was not the first crossing between Tower Hamlets to the north and Southwark to the south, it quickly became the more popular route, leading to the demise of the Tower Subway (one of the world’s first underground railways, which went out of service in 1898).

 

The model consists of 1,289 pieces, is built in scale 1:650. It features moveable spans and represents the current blue and white color scheme (which it also was originally painted in).

Lego modular inspired by rococo architecture. Computer rendering but only existing bricks were used.

For Brickscaliburs Rogues and Outlaws category

Pièces : 2150

Dimensions : 63cm * 15cm * 14cm

 

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