lego doctor who police box

lego doctor who police box

lego doctor who made of steel

Lego Doctor Who Police Box

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Doctor Who89 ReviewsFIND MORE PRODUCTS LIKE THISSpaceFantasyIdeasBuild, display and role play with Doctor Who! when you choose at checkout. Dispatched from and sold by Brick The World. See more product details Discover top brands: LEGO, Playmobil, Barbie, NERF, Sylvanian Families and more. LEGO Ideas Doctor Who Assembly Kit LEGO Ideas 21302 The Big Bang Theory Set FREE Delivery in the UK. Get free shipping on this item when you purchase 1 or more Qualifying items offered by Brick The World. Here's how (terms and conditions apply) Product Dimensions7.2 x 26.2 x 19.1 cm Manufacturer recommended age:10 years and up Manufacturer's Suggested Maximum Weight9.1 Grams Number of Puzzle Pieces623 11,881 in Toys & Games (See top 100) in Toys & Games > Building & Construction Toys Delivery Destinations:Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered. Date First Available9 Sept. 2015 This product is subject to specific safety warnings




Who is this Doctor? The Doctor is a centuries-old alien, a Time Lord who travels in time and space in his spaceship, the TARDIS (a blue police box), frequently with companions. Build a detailed LEGO model of the TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimension in Space); usually referred to as the TARDIS, the ship, the blue box, the capsule or the police box. What do customers buy after viewing this item? LEGO Dimensions, Doctor Who, Level Pack Cuusoo 21108 Ghostbusters Ecto-1, Limited Edition LEGO Dimensions, Doctor Who, Cyberman and Dalek Fun Pack See all 88 customer reviews Mr. A. J. Messenger See all 88 customer reviews (newest first) My son has been waiting for them to make Dr Who lego. He was absolutely made up with it A really good lego set, challenging and fun to build. I completely recommend it. My ten year old loves this lego! My first lego purchase for a number of years.... loved it! Brought for my son who loves both Lego and Dr Who, It is a really good set that once built is fun to play with as well without falling to bits.




See and discover other items: model ship kits Toys & Games > Building & Construction Toys New (92) from $69.75 LEGO Ideas Doctor Who 21304 Building Kit Construct a stunningly detailed LEGO version of the iconic TARDIS and role-play the Doctor’s time-travel adventures! Created by fan-designer Andrew Clark and selected by LEGO Ideas members, this set is based on the BBC’s popular and long-running television series about a Time Lord – the Doctor – exploring the universe in a blue police box. Due to trans-dimensional engineering, the TARDIS is bigger on the inside than the outside and this cool multifunctional set includes the console room that houses all the flight controls. Regenerate the Doctor and defeat the evil Daleks and a Weeping Angel with the help of his extraordinary companion Clara. Then close the doors of the TARDIS and launch into another dimension! Includes 4 minifigures with assorted accessory elements: the Eleventh Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor, Clara Oswald and a Weeping Angel, plus 2 Daleks.




- Includes 4 minifigures with assorted accessory elements: the Eleventh Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor, Clara Oswald and a Weeping Angel, plus 2 Daleks. - Features an opening TARDIS, detachable interior console room with assorted flight controls, exclusive graphic details and steps. - Build an authentic replica of the iconic TARDIS time machine in LEGO bricks! - Great for display or role-playing scenes from the TV series. - Accessory elements include the Eleventh Doctor’s Fez and the Doctor’s signature accessory – The Sonic Screwdriver for the Twelfth Doctor. - The Doctor fits inside the TARDIS when closed. Includes a booklet about the fan-designer and the BBC television series. - The perfect gift for LEGO and Doctor Who fans of all ages! - TARDIS measures over 4” (11cm) high, 2” (6cm) wide and 2” (6cm) deep. - Console room measures over 5” (14cm) high, 6” (16cm) wide and 8” (21cm) deep. - TARDIS with console room measures over 5” (14cm) high, 6” (16cm) wide and 9” (23cm) deep.




Build, display and role play with Doctor Who! Go time-travelling with this LEGO Ideas Doctor Who set featuring opening TARDIS, console room, Clara Oswald, Daleks and a Weeping Angel. Construct a stunningly detailed LEGO version of the iconic TARDIS and role-play the Doctor's time-travel adventures! Created by fan-designer Andrew Clark and selected by LEGO Ideas members, this set is based on the BBC's popular and long-running television series about a Time Lord - the Doctor - exploring the universe in a blue police box. Includes 4 minifigures with assorted accessory elements: the Eleventh Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor, Clara Oswald and a Weeping Angel, plus 2 Daleks. Features an opening TARDIS, detachable interior console room with assorted flight controls, exclusive graphic details and steps. Build an authentic replica of the iconic TARDIS time machine in LEGO bricks! Great for display or role-playing scenes from the TV series. Accessory elements include the Eleventh Doctor's Fez and the Doctor's signature accessory - The Sonic Screwdriver for the Twelfth Doctor.




The Doctor fits inside the TARDIS when closed. 10.3 x 7.5 x 2.8 inches 10 - 14 years #9,958 in Toys & Games (See Top 100 in Toys & Games) #615 in Toys & Games > Building & Construction Toys 5 star89%4 star8%3 star1%2 star1%1 star1%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsIt's bigger on the inside.There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes...|Highly recommend to any Doctor Who fan| A must for any Whovian|Most awesome Lego set ever!| See and discover other items: captain america series, fun family gifts, enterprise ship, silver sonicGiven that another company had the license for Doctor Who building sets at the time, I was both shocked and overjoyed when the LEGO Ideas team announced that 21304 Doctor Who would be released in January 2016. UPDATE (Dec 1, 2015): LEGO has released 21304 Doctor Who early! LEGO sent The Brothers Brick an early copy, and I’m pleased to bring you this full photo review. Unlike many of you out there who grew up watching Doctor Who on the BBC or PBS, I never had the opportunity in Japan.




It was with fresh eyes that I first started watching Doctor Who in 2005, with Christopher Eccleston’s 9th Doctor. Since then, I’ve caught many classic storylines, particularly during the 50th Anniversary celebrations two years ago. I’ve become enough of a Whovian that I even picked up some of those non-LEGO Doctor Who figures when I visited New Zealand, and snapped them up when they started showing up as stocking stuffers here in the States. Now with an official LEGO set, the subject matter alone is exciting, but how’s the actual set? There are really no surprises at this point with the box and instructions from LEGO Ideas sets — a solid box good for storage and a perfect-bound instruction booklet that includes tidbits about the subject matter and profiles of the LEGO Ideas project originator, Andrew Clark, and the team at LEGO who helped transform his initial designs into a workable product. The set is recommended for ages 10 and up, and the complexity is indeed a bit lower than the last fan-designed set I reviewed, LEGO Ideas 21303 Wall-E.




As you can see from the box art, there’s a lot going on in this set — both an exterior and interior view of the TARDIS, two Daleks, a Weeping Angel, not one but two Doctors, and Clara Oswald. The bricks and minifigs come in six unnumbered bags, though, so you start by opening all of them. I’ve taken to using the box that a LEGO set comes in to build it, and had no trouble finding pieces later after dumping all the bags into the box. Naturally, I built the minifigs first, but I’ll come back to them later in this review. You start by building the interior of the TARDIS, which is mostly standard studs-up construction (with a bit of the usual Technic for sturdiness and play features) until you get to the console, which includes six brick-built panels clipped at an angle onto the central core. Part of the Technic understructure exposes an axle that will connect to the “outside” TARDIS later. Next, you build a couple of Daleks, which employ a bit more SNOT (studs not on top) construction, putting the outward-facing studs to good use.




Each of the Dalek’s “arms” are brick-built. While the manipulator arm not being a LEGO plunger does seem like a minor missed opportunity for a behind-the-scenes sort of in-joke, both it and the sensor/camera arm include 1×1 round plates with holes that look great at this scale. Since I’m sure everyone will want to build their own Daleks in a variety of colors, I’ve included some breakdown photos. The head uses some interesting new parts, including the aforementioned 1×1 round plate with a hole (new in black), 2×2 round tile with a hole (new in dark tan), as well as a 1×1 tile with a pin (which appears to be new in 2015). Of course, the star of the whole set is the TARDIS itself, a triumph in dark blue. The TARDIS has a 7×7 footprint, and uses window panels and 1×8 tiles to recreate the layered look of the wooden paneling on the police box. But the ingenuity of the LEGO TARDIS lies in its surprising play features, which — along with the minifigs — I’ll return to shortly…




21304 Doctor Who includes 623 pieces and 4 minifigs at 59.99 USD — a good value from a pure price per parts standpoint, by the old ratio. The TARDIS is built almost entirely from dark blue, with numerous parts never before seen in this unusual color, including corner tiles. We’ve come to expect decorated elements in LEGO Ideas sets to be printed, and again there’s no nasty surprise here (putting a whole new spin on the phrase “sticker shock”). In addition to a lot of standard printed tiles, there are eight 1×3 tiles printed with “Police Public Call Box” text (1×6 text split across pairs of 1×3 tiles), a large window panel printed with the miniature version of the TARDIS’s front door, eight exterior window panels, a “Police Telephone” notice window panel, St. John Ambulance window panel, two clip panels for the TARDIS console, two 2×2 radar dishes with the Dalek head dome design, and a 2×2 round plate with a funky design for the console again. The TARDIS interior includes some useful pieces in dark gray and pearl silver, but the highlight for me was a new 2×2 round “jumper” tile with a stud in the middle that’s also a hole.




Imagine the SNOT possibilities of plugging that stud into its inverse — the 2×2 round tile with a hole. You can see it on top of the TARDIS core. As I recommended with Wall-E, this might be a set worth buying a second copy for the parts. Through a sequence of transformations, the police box opens to reveal another small TARDIS interior (also revealing that a pretty blue background makes for inconsistent lighting…). After taking off the top of the TARDIS, you swing two of the “Police Public Call Box” sections up on hinges, which enables you to open the TARDIS (this also explains why each sign is split across two 1×3 tiles). The interior of the police box version of the TARDIS is still large enough to hide a minifig. The opened exterior TARDIS then connects to the interior TARDIS through that Technic axle we saw earlier. The playlet component makes a nice display model, but the first thing I did when I finished building the set was remove the opened police box TARDIS from the interior TARDIS and swoosh it around the room singing “ooo-WEEE-ooooo!”




It’s also interesting comparing Andrew Clark’s fan design with the final set. The opening police box shares a lot of similarities (and is a pretty cool idea), but the TARDIS interior has a very different configuration. An interesting suggestion that didn’t make it into the final product was a sound brick to make the TARDIS’s unique sound (I have a trash can that makes those sounds when you open it). Andrew Clark’s original Ideas project had suggested a couple alternatives for the minifigs — David Tennant’s 10th Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler or Peter Capaldi’s 12th Doctor with Jenna-Louise Coleman as Clara — plus Tom Baker’s 4th Doctor as an extra fig. The set designers ended up going with Matt Smith’s 11th Doctor, the 12th Doctor, and Clara, plus a Weeping Angel. The 11th Doctor includes a Fez accessory, and the 12th Doctor includes his Sonic Screwdriver. There’s an extra Sonic Screwdriver in the set, so you can give that to the 11th Doctor if you feel like creating a rift in the space-time continuum (they’re actually pretty similar).




The 12th Doctor’s head doesn’t have an alternate face, but both the 11th Doctor and Clara have alternate quizzical expressions. Both Doctors have printing on their backs, and the multi-color printing on Clara’s legs goes all the way around. Naturally, the Weeping Angel has a behind-your-back out-to-get-you look as well as a calm statue look. This is a really fun set, though it didn’t induce squealing in me like Wall-E did. If you’re a hardcore Whovian, this set is a must-buy, obviously, and even a negative review from me wouldn’t have dissuaded you. But for sheer variety of useful minifigs and parts — all that dark blue especially — I’d be hard pressed to find a better value in a mid-size set. in January, if not sooner. Having lost a month of save data, I’m still working on catching up again in LEGO Dimensions, I’ll bundle a brief review here of the physical components of the Doctor Who Level Pack released a couple of weeks ago. The pack includes 12th Doctor, an adorable mini-TARDIS, and K-9.

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