flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New documentary shows Legos as touchstones of creativity

BIM and Information Technology

New documentary shows Legos as touchstones of creativity

Architect Bjarke Ingels remembers using the toy bricks to design one of his first projects.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | July 6, 2015
New documentary shows Legos as touchstones of creativity

Screenshot via YouTube

Over a five-day period last month, as part of the Milan Expo 2015 in Italy, a slim tower made from more than 500,000 Lego bricks rose to 35 meters (114.8 feet), setting a new Guinness World Record as the tallest structure built with those familiar acrylic bricks.

Denmark-based Lego Group donated 7 Euros (US$7.752) for every centimeter of the tower to Urban Oasis, an urban protection and development project connected with the World Wildlife Fund.

That tower offered one more example of the role that Legos have played in the worlds of construction and creativity since the company’s founding in 1932. Last month, Lego Group, the company that makes the toy bricks, established its Lego Sustainable Materials Centre, and announced that it would invest 1 billion Danish Krone (US$148 million) for research, development, and implementation of sustainable raw materials to make Lego bricks and packaging.

In the documentary, Bjarke Ingels—whose eponymous firm is based in Copenhagen, Denmark—notes that, because of its harsh climate and high labor wages, much of what gets built in that country must be prefabricated to shorten the construction time. 

The company has also teamed with Warner Bros., Interactive Entertainment, and TT Games to release an interactive video game that allows players to use Lego building sets digitally to build and create “wherever their skills and imagination roam,” says its press release.

“Our goal is to inspire and develop the builders of tomorrow,” said Lego Group’s owner Kjeld Kristiansen. “We believe that our main contribution to this is through the creative play experiences we provide to children.”

On July 31, a documentary film called "A Lego Brickumentary" will be released in the United States. Its narrator, the actor Jason Bateman, says it’s a story “about a simple toy and how its unique properties ushered in a new era of creativity for a whole generation.”

Along with a host of inventors and toy aficionados, the film interviews such Lego lovers as Facebook’s cofounder Mark Zuckerberg and Houston Rockets’ center Dwight Howard. Also featured prominently is starchitect Bjarke Ingels, who recounts how he won one of his first commissions by designing a model using Legos.

In the documentary, Ingels—whose eponymous firm is based in Copenhagen, Denmark—notes that, because of its harsh climate and high labor wages, much of what gets built in that country must be prefabricated to shorten the construction time. “In a manner of speaking, Denmark has become a country entirely built out of Legos,” he says in a clip of the film that Wired magazine posted on its site.

 

 

The Lego Group chose Ingels’ firm to design its Lego House, a 12,000-sm (129,167-sf), 23-meter-tall educational center in Billund, Denmark, whose purpose, in Kristiansen’s words, is “give us the opportunity to show how children learn through Lego play, and at the same time we can tell the Lego history in an involving way which reflects our values. Lego House is scheduled to open next year, but in the interim Lego Group will send a 1:100 scale model to six different fan events around the world. The model—built from 18,000 Lego bricks, of course—was seen by about 20,000 people who recently attended the largest Lego fan exhibition in Switzerland.

Related Stories

Sponsored | BIM and Information Technology | Sep 19, 2017

BIM vs VDC…how the US and the UK differ in approaching digital project delivery

In this four-part series, Bluebeam VP Sasha Reed sat down with industry experts to examine the need for defining and understanding digital workflows and data management throughout the design and construction project lifecycle.

Sponsored | BIM and Information Technology | Aug 28, 2017

3D scanning solution brought in to beat the heat on challenging fuel pipe demolition and replacement project

Acensium is an engineering consulting services firm with a focus on material handling retrofit projects and 3D scanning for as-built reality capture.

AEC Tech | Aug 25, 2017

Software cornucopia: Jacksonville Jaguars’ new practice facility showcases the power of computational design

The project team employed Revit, Rhino, Grasshopper, Kangaroo, and a host of other software applications to design and build this uber-complex sports and entertainment facility. 

Office Buildings | Jul 20, 2017

SGA uses virtual design and construction technology to redevelop N.Y. building into modern offices

287 Park Avenue South is a nine-story Classical Revival building previously known as the United Charities Building.

Accelerate Live! | Jul 6, 2017

Watch all 20 Accelerate Live! talks on demand

BD+C’s inaugural AEC innovation conference, Accelerate Live! (May 11, Chicago), featured talks on machine learning, AI, gaming in construction, maker culture, and health-generating buildings.

| Jun 13, 2017

Accelerate Live! talk: Is the road to the future the path of least resistance? Sasha Reed, Bluebeam (sponsored)

Bluebeam’s Sasha Reed discusses why AEC leaders should give their teams permission to responsibly break things and create ecosystems of people, process, and technology.

| Jun 13, 2017

Accelerate Live! talk: Incubating innovation through R&D and product development, Jonatan Schumacher, Thornton Tomasetti

Thornton Tomasetti’s Jonatan Schumacher presents the firm’s business model for developing, incubating, and delivering cutting-edge tools and solutions for the firm, and the greater AEC market.

| Jun 13, 2017

Accelerate Live! talk: The future of computational design, Ben Juckes, Yazdani Studio of CannonDesign

Yazdani’s Ben Juckes discusses the firm’s tech-centric culture, where scripting has become an every-project occurrence and each designer regularly works with computational tools as part of their basic toolset.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021