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Lego creation I built with inspiration from a photo by my favourite photographer Nicholas Alan Cope

Modern living at split levels. Three kinds of sections - striped, brown and olive green.

 

In Olive Sand House I combine the the desertlike surroundings and olive green/tan colour scheme of Whitebrick Sand House with the striped architecture of for example Green Rock House, Calmwater Cliff House and Vanilla House that has in some way become my trademark.

The largest temple in Ancient Rome, designed in characteristically Greek fashion and built under Emperor Hadrian, the third of the so-called "Five Good Emperors."

 

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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.

Inspired by The Cary Building, New York City, an all-white LEGO facade. About 6750 bricks. Computer rendering but only existing bricks/colors were used.

Original building was constructed in 1645 as a private palace in Uppsala, Sweden. From 1710 the building was used as the town hall. The building received its current exterior in 1883.

 

Modular building is constructed of three parts, 32x32 studs, where the middle part can be used as a separate modular building. Middle part contains a staircase. Total about 13000 bricks. 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.

Throwback to a moc that I created two years ago. New renderings and some minor changes from the original moc. Väven is a cultural center in Umeå, Sweden located next to Ume River. Väven was built in 2011-2014 and next to Väven is the hotel Stora Hotellet. Architects are Norwegian Snøhetta and White arkitekter. Computer rendering but only existing bricks were used.

This is a Lego modular of the F-town Building located in Sendai, Japan by architect Atelier Hitoshi Abe. About 8500 bricks of which over 3000 are white 1x1 plates. 😂 Computer rendering but only existing bricks were used. Reference images.

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.

Hong Kong Tonglau (Series 2)

Presenting a 1:2200 scale model of Perth CBD and surrounding area.

 

- 90 hours over 3 months

- 18,376 Bricks

- 78x78cm in size

No other city in the world has more erect Ancient Egyptian obelisks than Rome. These relics of the distant past were often plundered from their homeland by various Roman emperors touring their lands and taken back to Rome where they stood in forums or at the center of a spina in a Roman circus. This particular obelisk is no exception as it is the same one that stood amid the Circus of Caligula nearly 2,000 years ago. It has remained upright ever since, first at its original position (despite the demolition of the circus’s ruins to make way for Old St. Peter’s Basilica) until it was moved to its current position in 1586 at the direction of Pope Sixtus V. It is the only obelisk in Rome that has not toppled since ancient times, and it is also unknown precisely how long ago it was carved as there are no telltale surface engravings, unlike other Egyptian obelisks throughout Rome. It is believed to have been originally erected at Heliopolis, Egypt by an unknown Pharoah, until Emperor Augustus had it moved to the Julian Forum in Alexandria. The obelisk was then moved to Rome under Caligula’s orders in 37 CE.

 

This solid red granite obelisk stands roughly twenty-five meters (84 feet) tall and weighs around 320 tons. It is supported upon bronze lions and the Chigi family arms at its base, and topped by a bronze cross and additional set of Chigi arms which were added by Bernini to commemorate his patron, Pope Alexander VII, born Fabio Chigi, whose dedication is also denoted on the architrave inscriptions of the colonnades’ entablatures. With its base and spire, the obelisk rises to an impressive total height of forty-one meters (135ft). In the model, the aforementioned bronze lions and arms are represented here with a pair of contorted minifig handcuff elements and a ski pole at the top standing in for the other arms and the cross. Additionally, the architrave inscriptions of Alexander VII’s dedications have been painstakingly printed on the sides of plates at the ends and middles of the two colonnades by my skilled friends over at The Original BrickEngraver/BrickPrinter.

 

Pièces : 2150

Dimensions : 63cm * 15cm * 14cm

 

Well I have waited a while to post these, but here are the HD expansive photos of my Church Dream MOC from Summer of 2022. I went with natural lighting for the photos this time around and saw an incredible turn out. Little editing was required on the tale end of shooting. As for the slides the first five show the MOC in larger detail while the later five examine aspects of the free-form landscape and architecture better. At some point in the next few months I will either do a techniques post or a story Q&A. Thank you to any and all who supported this project along the way. I am incredibly happy with the result. If you have any feedback, it is greatly appreciated and as always, enjoy.

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.

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.

Pieces : 2320

 

Dimensions : 12cm * 15cm * 33cm

 

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That is what happens when you are only taught to serve

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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.

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.

Unity Temple is a Unitarian Universalist church in Oak Park, Illinois, and the home of the Unity Temple Unitarian Universalist Congregation. It was designed by the American architect Frank Lloyd Wright, and built between 1905 and 1908. Unity Temple is considered to be one of Wright's most important structures dating from the first decade of the twentieth century. (Wikipedia)

 

The LDD model uses 291 pieces.

Built for New Elementary Parts Festival, inspired by the Duomos of Florence and Milan.

See here for details on parts usage and build process.

Central Library is located in Milwaukee, WI. The building opened in 1898, and the model uses 298 pieces.

This 146-meter-tall office tower marks the end of the humble skyscraper boom in early 2000’s Munich. It is the tallest building in Bavaria, only surpassed by broadcasting facilities. It was completed in 2004 and designed by German architectural firm Ingenhoven Architekten.

The unwieldy name (that is: Munich Uptown Building) derives from its address in the northern region of Munich where it’s situated close to other high-rises such as the BMW-Vierzylinder and Highlight Towers.

Its current main tenant is Spanish communications company Telefónica, hence the giant O’s on the west and east facade of the tower. The high-rise itself is surrounded by several multi-story convention centers and offices.

 

The model consists of 2,787 pieces (649 of which are foliage) and is built in scale 1:650.

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.

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.

Based on East coast brownstones.

 

Quelques détails de mon projet 2018.

Бріксон Тауер // “Brickson Tower”

New Hashima: Sector 02 Inner City

lego scaled interior first try

Uppsala City Hall was first built 1957. However, it was only partially built according to the original drawings. This year the shape of the building was completed by Henning Larsen Architects. LEGO model has about 9300 bricks and is about 50x50 cm. If you want, you can visit Uppsala City Hall to see this model built ”non-digital” by Daniel Eggens.

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.

Original building was constructed in 1645 as a private palace in Uppsala, Sweden. From 1710 the building was used as the town hall. The building received its current exterior in 1883.

 

Modular building is constructed of three parts, 32x32 studs, where the middle part can be used as a separate modular building. Middle part contains a staircase. Total about 13000 bricks. 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.

Sydney Harbour, a 90x90cm cityscape model of Sydney's famous harbour at a 1:2200 Lego scale

 

the model has roughly 10,000 pieces and has been updated to reflect Sydney in 2023. An Expansion of this MOC is underway, Follow to keep updated!

 

- Sam

 

It would be difficult to overstate the precedence of St. Peter’s Basilica as it qualifies for numerous superlatives including the most renowned work of Renaissance architecture, the largest church in the world, and one of only four Papal Basilicas. The Latin term “basilica” originally referred to a large, multipurpose, often-elongated building in Ancient Roman architecture. Well-known examples of this would be the Basilica Julia, Basilica Aemilia, and the inimitable Basilica of Maxentius & Constantine. Accordingly, this also became the standard vernacular by which Old St. Peter’s Basilica was constructed under Constantine I in the fourth century CE, the time period depicted in my SPQR piece. Eventually, basilicas came to denote rank among the churches of Catholicism. Though it is one of the four major basilicas of the Catholic Church, St. Peter’s is technically not a cathedral as that classification would require it to be the seat of a bishop, and the seat of the Bishop of Rome (the Pope) is at Saint John Lateran, elsewhere in Rome Proper.

 

Classifications aside, St. Peter’s Basilica is unmatched in its sheer size and the resultant vastness of its interior. From front-to-back it measures 220 meters (720 feet) in length, and from side-to-side 150 meters (490 feet) in width. The interior height of the nave rises to a lofty 137 meters (448 feet). To put this into perspective, the basilica was enormous beyond anything constructed since ancient Roman times and, indeed, remains exceptional even by today’s standards as it is still the largest church in the world. Put another way, you could fit the footprints of four One World Trade Center towers in a square at the center of the church, and you would still have the semicircular apses and the vast nave left unoccupied. The liturgies held within host audiences of up to 80,000 - more than the capacity of the Colosseum at its height, whose stones were quarried for the rebuilding of St. Peter’s and other contemporary structures until Pope Benedict XIV consecrated its remains in 1749. St. Peter’s also welcomes more than 10 million visitors per year. Whether for the sake of pilgrimage or marveling at the gilded vastness within, visitors can view masterpieces such as Michelangelo’s marble Pietà or Bernini’s enormous bronze baldacchino (altar canopy) and Cathedra Petri (Chair of Saint Peter).

 

This build is a large castle/landscape display featuring The Knights of the Black Falcon and The Forest Guard.

 

First and foremost the aim of this build was to showcase what I love about those classic mid-80s Castle sets and specifically my two favourite factions. I have drawn inspiration from the original sets featuring each faction, specifically what I loved about them as a child and aimed to contrast that with what appeals to me as an adult builder.

 

The build features two fortresses side by side, Falkenholt Castle, the fortress of the Knights of the Black Falcon and an underground network of caves and tunnels that comprise the fortress of the Forest Guard.

 

Some of the elements that I am most happy with in this build are the level of detail and texture, the cross-section style cutaway on the edges of the build showing the internal structure of the castle as well as the geological layers of rock, clay and soil.

 

harrisbricks.com/project/the-fortress-of-falkenholt/

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