World’s Largest LEGO Model is a 5.3m Piece X-Wing

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Photograph by LEGO

 

On May 23, 2013, LEGO unveiled the world’s largest LEGO model, a 1:1 replica of the LEGO® Star Wars™ X-Wing starfighter, in New York’s Times Square. The massive replica took 32 master builders, five million LEGO bricks and over 17,000 hours to complete.

The model weighs nearly 20,865 kilograms (46,000 pounds), stands 3.35 meters tall (11 ft) and 13.1 meters long (43 ft), with a wingspan of 13.44 meters (44 ft). The Model will eventually be installed at LEGOLAND® California Resort where it will be for the remainder of the year.

LEGO Star Wars is the original and most successful licensed product collection in The LEGO Group’s history and remains among the best-selling global toy lines.

Some Mind-boggling facts about the world’s largest LEGO model:
• Contains 5,335,200 LEGO bricks
• Weighs 45,980 pounds/20,865 kilograms
• Height: 11 feet / 3.35 meters
• Length: 43 feet / 13.1 meters
• Wingspan: 44 feet / 13.44 meters
• 32 builders spent 17,336 hours to construct – about 4 months
• Built in the LEGO Model Shop in Kladno, Czech Republic
• Is a one-to-one replica of LEGO Star Wars set #9493; The model is 42x the size of the retail building set

[Sources: LEGO.com, CoolThings.com, Wired]

 

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Photograph by LEGO

 

 

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Photograph by LEGO

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by CoolThings.com

 

 

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Photograph by LEGO

 

 

 

 

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A Bonsai Version of the Baggins Hobbit Home

 

Chris Guise is an artist and bonsai enthusiast from Maidenhead, England. A mechanical engineer by trade, Chris has a beautiful collection of Bonsai trees that he has cultivated on his Flickr page. In the Bonsai below, entitled Bag End Bonsai Trayscape, Chris created the home of Bilbo Baggins, Frodo Baggins and Samwise Gamgee; where both the Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit tales begin and end.

The level of detail is stunning and it’s truly a fantastic piece of living artwork. To see this and many more beautiful Bonsai trees, check out Chris Guise’s stream on Flickr.

[via InYourLibrary]

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“Not long after I bought this tree I carved a shari down the trunk, covered the edges with cut paste and left it alone. After two years the edges had callused over nicely. Not long after I did it I decided that I would like to hollow out the trunk further” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“The carving work was done with a dremel, using various small carving bits.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“After fitting the drainage mesh and tie-wires to the slab a mound of akadama was placed on it and the tree gently positioned and secured. I then built a peat/clay ‘muck’ retaining wall around the outside backfilled it with potting soil.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“After the brick front was secured I started work on the back. I needed to build up a high mound of soil behind the frontage, even higher that the top of the bricks so I decided to try using florist’s Oasis as a filler. It is very light, obviously absorbs lots of water and is easy to cut and shape. It was secured to the back of the brickwork with wire and was then covered over with a thin layer of muck and potting soil.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“The frontage was built onto a plastic mesh backing. The mesh binds everything together so that the finished item is able to withstand a lot of handling. The bricks were cut from a roofing tile, tumbled to knock the sharp edges off and cemented around a round plastic former. After the window and door were finished the space in between was bricked up.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“The brass doorknob was turned on my small metalworking lathe. After rough turning it was finished off with fine emery paper and then wire wool.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“For the fence, strips of Meranti wood were split with a knife and wound together with anodised aluminium wire. Before assembly the strips were given a coat of diluted dark wood stain to take away the freshly cut look, and the wire was aged by rubbing it with wire wool.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

“I had built a slate path up from the gate to the front door, with a little paved area extending under the window. The cracks and gaps between the slabs were filled in with little tufts of moss.” – Chris Guise on Flickr

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

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Artwork and Photography by Chris Guise

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Life Size Replica of the Iconic Hot Wheels Twin Mill

Twin Mill

 

In 1968, American toymaker Mattel released a series of 1:64 scale die cast cars called Hot Wheels. The first series of cars released (16 in total) were ‘customized’ versions of well known models like the the Camaro, Corvette and Mustang. However, later that year, Hot Wheels designer Ira Gilford began concept work on what would eventually become the iconic ‘Twin Mill’, which made it’s debut in 1969.

The design was unmistakable. Massive dual engines with giant scoops up front, and big, wide exposed wheels in the rear. To date, some 12 million have been produced. To avid Hot Wheels collectors, a mint, in-the-package original Twin Mill could go for as much as $800. [Source]

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Fast forward to 1998, the 30th anniversary of the famous toy series, and an executive at Mattel decides it would be fantastic to reproduce a life-size replica of a Hot Wheels car. The model chosen? The Twin Mill of course!

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

The project was entrusted to Boyd Coddington (Hot Rods by Boyd) with Chip Foose in charge of the build. Unfortunately, Hot Rods by Boyd went bankrupt later that year. However, the unfinished Twin Mill project was not ‘present’ when the collectors came to cart everything away. [Source]

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

The project remained unfinished until Hot Wheels Director Carson Lev revived the Twin Mill and contracted Barry Lobeck to finish the job. The completed car made its debut at the 2001 SEMA show in Las Vegas to great adulation.

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

The car is fully functional. Headlights, tail lights, turn signals, gauges and of course the twin 502 big blocks providing an estimated 1,400 total horsepower. The view when driving is rather limited with those massive blowers taking up so much real estate! The Twin Mill has also recently changed colours from Spectraflame Red to Spectraflame Green.

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Photograph by Street Rodder

 

Sources

– Original Article with more pics by Street Rodder: http://www.streetrodderweb.com/milestones/0307sr_milestone_twin_mill/
– Hot Wheels Media: http://www.hotwheelsmedia.com/i/brand-facts/life-size-cars
– Hot Wheels on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Wheels
– Hot Wheels Official Site: http://www.hotwheels.com/

 

Hot Wheels For Real™

 

 

 

 

 

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A Full Scale Gundam Model in Japan

 

The RX-78 Gundam is a fictional manned robot, introduced in 1979 in Yoshiyuki Tomino’s and Sunrise’s anime series Mobile Suit Gundam. In the series, it is a testbed weapon for the Earth Federation when it falls into the hands of Amuro Ray, the son of a weapons designer, who goes on to pilot it in the Earth Federation’s war against the Principality of Zeon [Source: Wikipedia].

As part of the 30th Anniversary of the Gundam series, the company officially announced a project on March 11, 2009 called Real-G, planning to build a 1/1 real size scale Gundam in Japan. The 18-meter (59-ft) full scale model was completed on June 9, 2009. The statue first appeared in Diver City Toyko, Odaiba, Tokyo, Japan. Until the exhibition’s closing on August 31, 2009, the statue had been visited 4.15 million times [Source: Fotopedia].

The Gundam statue was later reconstructed in Shizuoka Prefecture where it stayed from July 2010 to March 2011. It again reopened in Tokyo on April 19, 2012 [Source: Fotopedia].

Despite being released in 1979, the original Gundam series is still remembered and recognized within the anime fan community. The series revolutionized mecha anime, introducing the new Real Robot genre, and over the years became synonymous with the entire genre for many. The RX-78 Gundam was recognized as a culturally significant subject by the nation of Japan on October 23, 2000, with the inclusion of the suit and the main pilot on two stamps in the 20th Century Stamp Series [Source: Fotopedia].

 

 

 

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Photograph by Alan Shibuya246

 

 

 

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Miniatur Wunderland: World’s Largest Model Railway

 

Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg, Germany, is home to the world’s largest model railway, with miniature replicas of famous destinations around Europe and America. The level of detail is incredible and the figures are simply mind-boggling:

– Model area = 1,150 sq. meters (12,378 sq ft)
– Track length = 12,000 meters (39,370 ft)
– Trains = 890 approx.
– Wagons = 11,000+
– Longest train = 14.51 meters (47.6 ft)
– Lights = 300,000+
– Buildings and Bridges = 3,500
– Figurines = 200,000
– Cars = 5,500
– Trees = 215,000
– Work hours = 500,000+
– Staff = 185
– Construction cost = $14.16 million USD (as of summer 2010)

Check out the small sample of pictures below along with information on how Miniatur Wunderland started. For further information and photographs, please visit: miniatur-wunderland.com

 

 

 

 

 

MINIATUR WUNDERLAND – HOW IT BEGAN

 
Frederik Braun and his then-girlfriend and now wife, were visiting the alpine city of Zurich in July 2000. Sauntering through the alleys of Zurich’s center, they came across a railway model shop, which at once evoked childhood memories in Frederik.

During the following hours, the idea of realizing the long forgotten childhood dream became more and more mature. On the very same day he called his twin brother Gerrit and surprised him with the following words: “We are going to build the largest model railway in the world.”

Gerrit, who is more rational and skeptical by nature, doubted Frederik’s state of mind and didn’t take the idea too seriously. However, after having received about six more calls from Frederik enthusiastically presenting new ideas about this topic, Gerrit realized that his brother was very serious about it. So, he started thinking about the project from an economic and technical point of view.

Gerrit had been infected by this idea as well. The two brothers passed the coming days intensely planning their dream despite many doubts and misgivings from their environment. Only a few days after Zurich’s enlightenment both of them were sure that they would engage in this adventure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE MINIATUR WUNDERLAND WORLD

 

The Miniatur Wunderland has been constantly growing since 2001. Having started with two layout areas, Harz and Southern Germany, the Wunderland has openend the eighth area, Knuffingen Airport, in May 2011. More layout areas have already been planned until the year 2014.

Other areas currently include: Hamburg, Austria, United States of America, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Switzerland. The next two destinations slated to be built are France and Italy.

All parts are built to a scale of 1:87. Much of the technology is custom-created as many of the stock components were not designed for continuous operation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

VISITING MINIATUR WUNDERLAND

 
The Wunderland is open year round from 9:30am – 6:00pm. Guided and behind the scenes tours can be booked in both German and English. Entrance fees are as follows:
 

 

 

 

VISIT miniatur-wunderland.com FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION