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A modular Parisian sort-of style hotel, featuring 2 basic rooms, 2 larger rooms, and a lovers' suite on the top floor, complete with a heart-shaped bed and wine bar. Also, a set of non-working elevators.

 

I'm fairly happy with the way it turned out... still working on improving my interiors... I ran out of tiles by the top floor, hence the boring plain white plate floor.

My 15th custom modular building - a church

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.

This Lego clock tower modular is inspired by Prague Astronomical Clock in Prague, Czech Republic. Besides the clock tower there are also three small houses. Total width of all buildings is 48 studs and about 4100 bricks were used. Computer rendering but only existing bricks were used.

Copyright © 2014 OffdaLipp Images

This image is protected under the United States and International Copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without written permission

(See more pictures and vote for this set at LEGO Ideas: ideas.lego.com/projects/f70e3ee2-8772-4423-a395-4c9f2bccb4b5 ) Founded by Richard and Maurice McDonald in 1940 with franchising started by Ray Kroc in 1953, the McDonald's restaurant chain now serves over 69 million customers in over 100 countries every day. Now a new location has opened in the world of LEGO. In honor of the small sized McDonald's restaurants in real life, this mini-McDonald's is designed for use in a LEGO modular city. Your minifigs can pop in for a quick bite to eat or grab some food to go as they explore the rest of the city. This set will also help celebrate the 80th anniversary of McDonald's in 2020.

modular building seen from the front

60° Origami Modulars (Maria Sinayskaya)

rectangles (around A4 proportions, slightly shorter/longer will work too) 4, 5, 30 units, no glue

The biggest one is folded with 5*7 cm rectangles.

Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 8 units, no glue

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.

This Lego Castle was built using a Lego Modular castle system called Kingdoms Modular Castle. You can vote for it at <a ideas.lego.com/projects/148797

This is a building that fully complies with the Lego Modular Buildings, using a 32x32 base plate, which can be built using two 10308 sets, using 1658 parts. Hope you like it!

rebrickable.com/mocs/MOC-130209/mocozone/10308-winter-mod...

A retexture and refitting of this modular sofa is available for grabs this weekend at the mainstore.

 

It includes a HUD with 4 new colors/textures, and 4 new woods as well as a soft-linked sample, but of course, you can always create your own sofa to your liking.

 

See it here: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/BLACK%20NEST/233/131/21

Modular hexagons

Designer: Valentina Minayeva (?)

Parts: 60 (6 x 10) triangles (side = 11,0 cm)

without glue

I designed this with the Parisian Restaurant in mind, but it is made to be totally modular and used with any Modular from Lego or custom built.

The central part of my idea is the park, which in turn can be used as a larger park or two smaller ones, on the likes of the Lego Pet Shop modular.

But there’s more! It can be connected to extra pavements and these can also be used with your modulars, to create squares, make a standard modular look like a corner one, or create your own and unique combination. Did I mention that there's also a colorful mosaic?

There's a bunch of accessories, from a fire hydrant to a comfy bench, and some of them are used to disguise the standard Technic brick used to connect modulars.

And if that was not enough, you will get a lot of accessories to make your city stem to life!

There's a newspaper kiosk, designed to remind the Parisian ones, a crepes rickshaw, a trash trolley, a monumental statue, two wonderfully flowered trees and a big oak tree to give some shade in the park.

And then several other smaller accessories that can be used with this set or all over your modular town.

And, last but not least, there’s 7 minifigs (and a dog) to animate the town!

If you are a Lego Modulars fan, you will want to have all of these in your Lego town.

Currently on Lego Ideas, please support me!

ideas.lego.com/projects/3a08d0cf-f70b-4384-8f17-6abfaf755ed2

Two firsts:

1. First time I synthesized a "natural" sound. Okay, I didn't design it per se, it was a lucky find, but so what.

2. First time I edited a video besides cropping it, trial and error with real software. I'm still surprised how far I got without any knowledge.

 

The titel is – of course – a Violent Femmes reference.

Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 8 units, no glue

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.

 

The roof isn't hinged, I just balanced it this way to show the ceiling, which contains the same detail as the miniature store, except these skylights are actually transparent and will let light into the building.

My first custom modular Lego building - a bank

This is a modular castle wall that can be expanded to your own liking. The main modules include the gate, the wall section and the corner section.

 

Each of them is connected to the other by technic pins.

 

If you wish to build these please check out the tutorials bellow:

 

Wall section: youtu.be/_dCbDXi5tuI

Corner section: youtu.be/eLtpEeupXUs

Gate: youtu.be/dQxpJUcwIUA

My first CC style building. Based heavily on the Medieval Market Village (10193).

 

Finally took a photo with a better camera and with (sort of) proper lighting.

Name: Brilliant modular (Artichoke)

Designer: Denver Lawson

Parts: 144 (18x8)

Paper's size : 1,85 to 21 cm

Joined with glue

Final height: ~ 22 cm

Made by photo: www.flickr.com/photos/childofsai/1216249551/ , www.flickr.com/photos/childofsai/1159548426/

I designed this with the Parisian Restaurant in mind, but it is made to be totally modular and used with any Modular from Lego or custom built.

The central part of my idea is the park, which in turn can be used as a larger park or two smaller ones, on the likes of the Lego Pet Shop modular.

But there’s more! It can be connected to extra pavements and these can also be used with your modulars, to create squares, make a standard modular look like a corner one, or create your own and unique combination. Did I mention that there's also a colorful mosaic?

There's a bunch of accessories, from a fire hydrant to a comfy bench, and some of them are used to disguise the standard Technic brick used to connect modulars.

And if that was not enough, you will get a lot of accessories to make your city stem to life!

There's a newspaper kiosk, designed to remind the Parisian ones, a crepes rickshaw, a trash trolley, a monumental statue, two wonderfully flowered trees and a big oak tree to give some shade in the park.

And then several other smaller accessories that can be used with this set or all over your modular town.

And, last but not least, there’s 7 minifigs (and a dog) to animate the town!

If you are a Lego Modulars fan, you will want to have all of these in your Lego town.

Currently on Lego Ideas, please support me!

ideas.lego.com/projects/3a08d0cf-f70b-4384-8f17-6abfaf755ed2

Design: Tomoko Fuse

Article to the design: origamitutorials.com/modular-origami-box-tomoko-fuse

60° Origami Modulars (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 4 units, no glue

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 Building Corner Inverter - Town Hall

Part of an experement to see how easy a 12x12 stud modular cityscape would be for a collaborative display.

A Modular Lego Bank set in the 1940's with interior details on all 3 floors.

Modular Origami Stars (Maria Sinayskaya)

rectangles (1:√3), 6 units, no glue

Reverses

Modular Origami Ring (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 8 units, no glue

Modular Origami Stars (Maria Sinayskaya)

rectangles (1:√3), 6 units, no glue

Front/reverse sides

Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 12 units, no glue

One of the old ones:

www.flickr.com/photos/goorigami/12677780405/

Modular Origami Stars (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 5, 8 units, no glue

A modular sporting goods store inspired by Mikimoto Building in Tokyo, Japan. Front facade is removable. About 3250 pieces. Computer rendering but buildable if you have the bricks.

I put up some pictures of it a while ago, but now I made some better ones.

It is also my project on Lego Cuusoo. lego.cuusoo.com/ideas/view/677

 

60° Origami Modular (Maria Sinayskaya)

rectangles 1:√3, 15 units, no glue

Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 6 units, no glue

Almost the same as the previous model but slightly bigger.

 

Folded with paper from "Zen Origami" book.

If you still have some of this paper left and want to replicate – let me know :)

My 16th custom modular building, a pharmacy and apartment

Technic Supercar Chassis; modular suspension, engine and integrated 'flat' auto gearbox.

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.

Variations of Corona Grande star (Maria Sinayskaya)

squares, 8 units, no glue

Origami paper created by Julia Schönhuber (papierdesign.at)

Same pattern for both stars, oriented in two different ways.

Modular Origami Star (Maria Sinayskaya)

A rectangles, 8 units, no glue

 

Other variations:

www.flickr.com/photos/goorigami/12461457095

www.flickr.com/photos/goorigami/7986420898

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