lego base plates 15 x 15

lego base plates 15 x 15

lego base plate roll

Lego Base Plates 15 X 15

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A new, square version of my portable lego trays ( and ). Sister Sunday @ Sisters of the Wild West Just Something I Whipped Up @ The Girl Creative all Festival @ The DIY Showoff Made by You Monday @ Skip to My Lou Tuesday Treasures @ My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia Tutorials & Tips Tuesday @ Home Stories A to Z Good Life @ A Beach Cottage Transformation Thursday @ The Shabby Creek Cottage Strut Your Stuff @ Somewhat Simple Share Awesomeness Thur @ The 36th Avenue Flaunt it Friday @ Chic on a Shoestring Frugal Friday @ The Shabby Nest Feathered Nest @ French Country Cottage All New Bright Colors You have never seen so many options! Besides all your favorites, Slab Dream Lab has all new colors for a classic building foundation. Our baseplate Slabs come in bigger and better sizes to expand your play area. Or make room for more friends. Bring Your Imagination to Life Choose themes that match your favorite minifig, cityscape or MOC.




With Slab Dream Lab, the possibilities are endless. Classic Green Baseplate (12x12) Bene´s Spielshop GmbH (alle Preise incl. Mehrwertsteuer, kein gemeinsamer Versand mit anderen Anbietern, daher Versandkosten beachten!) when you choose at checkout. Dispatched from and sold by Bene´s Spielshop GmbH (alle Preise incl. Mehrwertsteuer, kein gemeinsamer Versand mit anderen Anbietern, daher Versandkosten beachten!). There is a newer model of this item: LEGO Classic 10701 Grey Baseplate Playset LEGO Bricks & More 628: X-Large Grey Baseplate LEGO Bricks & More 626: Large Green Baseplate Lego Classic Sand Baseplate FREE Delivery on orders over . Product Dimensions38.3 x 38.3 x 0.4 cm Manufacturer recommended age:4 years and up Number of Game Players1 57,663 in Toys & Games (See top 100) Date First Available1 Jan. 2004 Whether you're constructing a castle scene or just like the colour gray, this building plate is the perfect starting point for building, displaying, transporting and playing with your LEGO creations.




This grey baseplate measures 15" x 15" (38cm x 38cm), so it's a great place to start building castles, skyscrapers, or what ever your imagination can come up with. See all Product Description 6 Brick Building Baseplates By The Wacky Warehouse - Large 10" x 10" (Gray) See all 210 customer reviews LEGO Creator 626 Green Baseplate Very useful with the building sets as it means you do not have to pack the building bricks away every time they play with them. See all 210 customer reviews (newest first) is exactly as described! My son loved it Good size board tad on the expensive side.Thought it was very flimsy.Not how I remembered them to be.Should be about quality and not cost cutting. Great item....hideous price but to be fair that's Lego! Toys & Games > Toys & Games: Amazon Global Delivery AvailableLEGO® → System → Creator 627 << 628 (Set 2, Set 3) >> 629 X-Large Grey Baseplate (2003) $14.99 €14.99 £10.49 $17.99




) / 3-99 (Packaging) / 4+ (Alternate packaging) 628 X-Large Baseplate was a re-release of the 1996 LEGO set which shares the same name and number with. Unlike the previous version, however, it included a Light Blue Grey version of Part 4186. Its length and breadth is 48 studs.Do not modify it. The perfect starting point for LEGO® creations! Whether you're constructing a castle scene or just like the color gray, this building plate is the perfect starting point for building, displaying, transporting and playing with your LEGO® creations. This x-large building plate measures 15 (38cm) x 15 (38cm) A great supplement to any LEGO collection! I'm thinking of making a LEGO table but my two children both use different LEGO sizes. My oldest uses normal LEGO and my youngest uses DUPLO. I'm wondering if there is a base plate that both types of LEGO bricks will work on? A regular LEGO base plate will work with DUPLO bricks. As demonstated in this question, the two systems are compatible in a number of ways.




Here's an example of System base plates with DUPLO bricks attached: It should be noted that not all DUPLO bricks will be able to connect to a System baseplate. Some examples of incompatibility are round bricks and some of the minifigs and animals. In order for these to connect you'll need a DUPLO brick or baseplate on top of the System baseplate. Regular LEGO baseplates can accommodate both LEGO and DUPLO. DUPLO obviously won't stick to regular baseplates as securely as on a DUPLO plate because the studs are much smaller, but they are compatible. There are some pre-made LEGO tables that already have baseplates (or third-party LEGO compatible baseplates) incorporated in the top surface, or you can make your own table and cover the top with baseplates. LEGO sells baseplates separately on their website, and they are also available at stores like Toys'R'Us. I have seen the pre-made tables at Toy'R'Us as well, and they are also available on eBay. What you need is a Nilo brick mat.




It's a rubbery mat that has standard (small) lego studs on one side, and dulpo on the other. You can buy them on Amazon, Ebay or straight from Nilo. Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count). Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?Browse other questions tagged compatibility duplo or ask your own question.My fire station project took more that a year to finish. The length of time was due to two First, the project was something that I worked on as a distraction to work and other projects I was involvedWhen things were getting too stressful, or I was stuck on a problem, I would take some time and play with the LEGOs. I felt better, and if I had to start back on the problem, at least I had cleared out the smoke and cobwebs. This helped me break out of




'tunnel vision' more than a few times! Second, since this was all coming from inside my head rather than from instructions, the project went through a few different phases of construction, as I changed my mind about what I wanted to build. Since I built this over a long period of time, I had lots of time to think about it between the chances I had to actually work on it. I had already collected a half-dozen (or so) fire vehicles, and designed a couple other Emergency ServiceMy first plan was to build a garage for them. fire station (model 6571), but this didn't fit my needs. fire trucks wouldn't fit through the door, and the garages were veryI needed more space, and more parts! I tried, unsuccessfully, to buy more of the roll-up door pieces from the LEGO Shop at Home folks. they would put together a service pack for this!) down and bought a second fire station, and construction began on a regular green 10" x 10" base plate.




I would have three garage bays, with roll-up doors on one end. I gradually needed to add windows and doors for folks to get in and out as well. Here are some pictures of Early pictures show the concept gettingThe fire vehicles were used to show me how tall and wide the garage bays needed to be. I fussed with the skeleton for a few weeks, during my spare time. During this time, I also decided to build a dispatch center, modeled after my experiences as an ambulance driver,This started out on a 5" x 5" grey base plate, and included ergonomic features such as swivel chairs, and swing-out keyboard and display screens! There were two dispatcher positions, and a supervisor position. While not trying to duplicate any existing center, I took what I thought were the good features of others I had seen, and added my own ides as well, and scaled it for the three positions while trying to make it as realistic as the scale and I decided I still didn't have enough garage




space for all my rigs, so I tried to extend the garage bays back with a 5" x 10" yellow plate. I also tried to attach the dispatch center to the side of the garage, which led to problems with staff accessI wanted to use the roof as a heliport, but I couldn't find a good way to allow for stairs to the second floor and roof. (The stairs would have been 'outside' the regular structure, and I didn't think that would be realistic.) Construction also began making a second floor for the station, for crew quarters, on a second green baseI wanted to make this as realistic and detailed as possible, including roof, and real walls. I also built a 3-story 'drill tower', for training the firefighters, complete with stairs and guard rails, windows with shutters, smoke machine and exhaust fan and roof vents. I even took pictures of a drill at the tower, using the aerial ladder Phase two was really the time when I tried to turn a bunch of separate projects into one (really big) unified




It was when I finally decided that it would be OK if this was a bigger project than anything I had done before. That was when I finally approached it like a real project, and looked at the needs of a real Fire Station. I would need plenty of beds, in at least two different crew quarters, plus living quarters, plus good access between floors without having to go outside. I wasn't sure how I was going to accomplish it all, but I wanted to go through the planning (which was a puzzle itself). I also figured in some design constraints. The two floors had been separate models until now. I had to make walls match, and I wanted the windows to line up between floors. had to figure out some type of supporting structure that would allow removal of the second floor, with anchor points that would keep it together as I moved it about for photos. The roof also had to have some center supports, and also be removable, and still stable.




I did more thinking than building in thisWhenever I tried to build some part of the station, I would think about other options, and different ways to build it. basically tried quick mock-ups, to test ideas. But, once I had made some plans and decisions, construction in Phase 3 would proceedI didn't jot many ideas down, they just existed in my mind. To help record some of the ideas, I took a few more pictures during some of the mock-ups. The garage was moved to a 15" x 15" grey base plate, and the dispatch center added on the side, to allow for having the stairs to the second floor to be inside the structure. There was a setback from the front of the building, allowing access to the Engine Bay from the 'outside', with a lighted foot walk andThere was a set of windows installed above the dispatch consoles, so the dispatchers could look into the truck bays. of the dispatch center became an outdoor patio for the crews. the stairs came down before, I put a sliding pole between the floors,




and then wrapped a stairwell around the pole. I also added equipment storage under the stairs, and another access door at the side and rear of the station. The truck bays were finally deep enough, but I didn't have enough door pieces to put roll-up doors on both ends. grudgingly bought a third fire station, but I still couldn't finishA search finally turned up an older fire station (model 6389) that had only been advertised in one of the Shop at Home catalogs, three years earlier! So, while I was buying my fourth fire station, at least I was getting another set of instructions that IThis gave me another different fire engine, as well as enough doors to finish the truck bays. Here's what that older Fire The extension of the truck bays also gave me a chance to extend the second floor, so I had two separate crew bedrooms, a kitchen, and a combination living room and lookout area. The large windows at the rear of the station look out upon the




training tower and equipment yard.. The second floor was also built to be removable in two parts, so you could see into the engine bays. The patio/dispatch center roof was also removable, so you could move the mini figures within the Communications Center. allowed plenty of light into the center. There were also skylights above the stairs to the second floor. I also added a heliport with three pads. for the medical evacuation chopper, one for the fire tanker, and one for the site survey chopper. There was also a shelter/windbreak, to protect ground crews from the air during takeoffs and landings, and a fire extinguisher hand truck, based on a device used at the local heliport at nearby hospitals. After building the helipad, I also needed to put up aircraft warning lights along the rooftop of the station and the training tower, and add area lighting for night landings. that realism would play a big role in this.




I also put air conditioners on the rooftop, and some communications antennas. is one antenna that I fashioned by adding a metal and plastic rod to the top of a white, round 1x1 plate. This is one of less than a dozen elements I have modified.) I finally took my LEGOs out in the sun to play, and take more pictures. You can view the pictures of the station, and the drills here soon. Now that the Fire Station is finally "finished", I have moved on to other projects. very interested in the LEGO trains, after receiving my Load &The last bricks of Fire Station 1 have fallen , giving its collection of roll-up door parts to a working 5-bay round house and turntable for my trains. These pages are NOT sponsored or endorsed by the LEGO companies. They are the creation of an enthusiast of LEGO bricks. (The LEGO companies have their own pages. This page is mine. K. Z. Harris, N6UOW Developed on a PowerBook DUO 230!

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