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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.
Celebrating my 9th piece of modern architecture in the archiBRICKture series, the modular LEGO Store is a colorful and clean building where both adults and kids will find all the joy with the LEGO bricks!
The design rips off all colors except on the front door, above where you can find all the different colors of LEGO bricks, the signature of this brand. Next to the door is the giant wooden sculpture of minifigure, and people will have no difficulty to locate the store!
The new building introduces different curves and round corners to soften the block massing, giving the facade a subtle but interesting look. The curves also go around the facade cut-out for the minifigure statue and the glass wall behind it, which allows sunlight to enter the shop.
There are 3 floors and a rooftop. Inside, you can find all the popular box sets including the latest ones, a Pick-A-Brick corner, a children play area and a LEGO factory machine display. On the rooftop, you can have some refreshments, or share ideas if there is any MOC event.
So now you have a new place to haunt, what are you waiting for?
MJC's traditional cuisine is a modular building created by my family. Please support the project here ideas.lego.com/projects/145398
Custom Moog Modular. I spent the day burning this in. The modules were restored and assembled into this custom configuration by a good friend of mine. It sounds …… well , like a Moog!
I borrowed this concept from a modular design recently posted by Hare_ru. My version is based on the strut interlocking concept from my ZEBRA construction system. However, each of the units is folded from an A4 sheet precreased with the Six Interlocking Ducts base grid instead of a ZEBRA ABO or ABX grid.
Same Fun in LDD: a Modular Office Building with1 Basement and 3 supplementary Floors. Now I need an interior. ;)
Here is another section of modular terrain. This time I chose to do a stream, since water is one of the areas where I think modular terrain standards could benefit from an update.
Here is the first module, showing the axles I have inserted in preparation for connecting the two modules.
This is actually how I designed this MOC in LDD. Each 'snap-in' module was color-coded for easy selection.
The red section, the 'cockpit' module, was the first piece created, with the yellow 'canopy' and blue 'nose' modules following closely after. The green 'engine' module took a while to figure out, and the orange 'landing gear' module took a little bit of time after that, especially since most of it is built upside-down.
I wanted to build a modular corner building. I tried to build in the style of the Dutch 19th century architect C. Peters, wgho has mainly built a lot of post offices, in a sort of gothic-revival eclectical style. Only the ground floor has an interior.
Yeah, I still have a mess to take care of. As of right now, my 2.0 city is about 85% complete.
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If you would like to use this picture in any sort of form, please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com.
Modular Vegetable Garden created as a central MOC for my city. Playing around with NPU building techniques en cool references.
This is a truncated hexahedron that has had 6 square-cupola-shaped holes excavated from the octagonal faces. Composed solely of squares and triangles, it is a mish-mash of different face-based modular origami "technologies":
- Purple-green-and-orange central cube: 6 Double Stopper modules (from Tomoko Fuse's Kusudama Origami, page 52) These units have 4 pockets and no flaps; I had to improvise "Y"-shaped joining tabs from leftover paper in order to connect the double stoppers together while still leaving 12 flaps free at the cube's edges.
The Double Stopper units are made of three nested square sheets, with each nested square being half the area of the next largest square. The completed units each took 2.25 sheets of paper, not counting leftovers. There was no need for scissors as I simply tore my orange sheets into fourths to make the central squares.
- Purple tetrahedron walls: 24 Regular Triangle modules (Kusudama Origami, page 70.) These units have three flaps and no pockets, so they were double-stuffed into the roomy Square Flat Unit modules.
- Green tetrahedron bases: 8 Equilateral-triangular Flat Unit II modules (from Kunihiko Kasahara's Origami Omnibus, page 204.) These units have 3 spacious pockets and no flaps, so they slipped rather snugly over the 24 free flaps on the Regular Triangle modules in the corners.
- Square cupola walls: 12 Square Flat Unit modules (from Tomoko Fuse's Unit Polyhedron Origami, page 8.) These units have 4 spacious pockets and no flaps, and I only had to use three of the four pockets on each unit anyway. They're made from two whole sheets of paper, which is wasteful, but it also afforded me the opportunity to color each side of the squares differently.
All of these units are remarkable because each one has a side length which is exactly 1/2 the length of the original sheet of paper, meaning they are all compatible. This meant that I had a wide variety of options for "where to get the flaps" to fill pockets and vice versa. The solution I came up with here is by no means unique.
All told, I needed 65 sheets of paper to complete this project, including 25.5 sheets of Halloween-themed scrapbook paper.
And yes, the Geomag folks did it first. But my truncated cube is made of paper, so there!
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.
Modular Vegetable Garden created as a central MOC for my city. Playing around with NPU building techniques en cool references.
Modular #kitchen
The kitchen is the heart of the home; meals and memories are made here
We think creatively to satisfy your #construction needs!
Contact: 95006 45566
Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 12 units, no glue
This one is not quite right, actually! When I started assembling it I noticed that the pocket is a tiny bit larger than the flap (and a quick check in Illustrator. Easy to assemble - but not mathematically correct.
This old one (on the right) IS correct, though! I have checked :D
Modular Origami Stars (Maria Sinayskaya)
squares, 8 units, no glue
Yet another 8-pointed star which looks exactly as previous ones:D
Made from leftover paper, 3.75cm squares.
Modular origami of 2020 Tokyo Olympic emblem. The origami model is designed by me.
Molecules are designed to be looked the model like square tessellation.
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. You can find more photo's and information in my flickr stream.
If you want any detail photo's, just ask. I'd be happy to post them.
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.
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 Flower
Folded by Marcela Brina
Designer: Tomoko Fuse
More details in: www.artisbellus.com/2014/09/origami-flower-modular-flower...