lego shop legoland denmark

lego shop legoland denmark

lego shop kyoto

Lego Shop Legoland Denmark

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Book online and save up to 10%! Kids aged under 3 go FREE! Located in the heart of Forum Istanbul. Tickets fromonly 33 TL! Book online and save up to 20%! 12 Months unlimited play 10% discount on birthday parties and in the LEGO® Shop 10% discount on SEA LIFE Istanbul ticket prices 20% discount in the cafe Save 10 % on Annual Passes! 12 months unlimited play 10% Discount on birthday parties 10% discount on SEA LIFE Istanbul ticket price Let your imagination run wild in a LEGO® world of colour, creativity and family entertainment. Indoor family attraction designed specifically for 3-10 years olds to enjoy - everything is kid sized! 2 LEGO® rides, 15 Immersive LEGO® play experience, LEGO® 4D cinema. Model Builder Academy – learn LEGO® building tips from the experts. MINILAND – see Istanbul and Europe’s iconic buildings and attractions made from LEGO® bricks. Enjoy a birthday party to remember in our birthday party rooms.




Adults* must be accompanied by a child (except at our adult only evening events) School and Educational visits which support the local curriculum. Come and join us at LEGOLAND Discovery Centre Istanbul, one of the Istanbul top attractions for kids and their families!“” via mobileThe staff is super friendly but the infrastructure is crud! As a professional trying to upload files, the internet repeatedly quitting out is totally unacceptable. Multiple times I was transferring files, the internet would disconnect and cancel my work. Level Contributor“” via mobileI have been many times to the buffet in Legoland hotel. White table cloth and nice tables. Try the fish and make yourself the famous stjerneskudd (local name!). For business: Great meeting rooms here outside summer season. Level Contributor“” Stayed there for one night during October 2016. We stayed just for one night and I think it was OK. I think the age 13 is the limiting age for this hotel and Legoland park.




Connected to the Legoland park (from within the hotel you can pass... Level Contributor“” the location beats it all - just next to the legoland, the very first one. staff is great, friendly and helpful, and the breakfasts nice. the equipment of the kingdom-themed room (500 USD per night, which is not cheap even for denmark) was a bit of disappointment: first of all, no air condition in august (and any other month, actually)... Level Contributor“” My last visit in Billund I chose LEGOLAND hotel. I stayed in Adventure room. The room was quite large with 2 rooms. One was for children and the other one with king-sized bed for adults. The children's room is equipped with LEGO bricks for playing and many small 3D models made out of LEGO. Room is equipped with kettle, fridge,... Level Contributor“” via mobileExactly what you expect from Danish hospitality in Billund. Clean, smart and tidy decoration with a touch of mood lighting in the restaurant if you need some hygge.




And lots of Lego.1Thank Daddy2handa Level Contributor“” Stayed here 1 night to be close to the airport....a little upset the park was closed (well it was November) Great location for airport..and no noise from it. Lovely check in process, very smooth & lots of helpful info. Fab wee lego shop by reception. We had a Pirate Room and the theme was well carried out...the room was fine... Level Contributor“” via mobileThis hotel was awesome ! The kids bed had little legal packs on themthere was tons of lego figures around the hotel , and round lego buckets for kids to build ... there was a kids area with video games , pool Table and. Foosball table. There buffet for breakfast was bright and clean and the food was... Level Contributor“” it is interesting not only for the child, but for whole family to be there, the room is excelent. we were in Ninjago and my son was very happy. The strange is that you have to make reservation even for the breakfast, but may be this is because the hotel is very big.




Level Contributor“” We went without our kids(who are teenagers) on business. this is definitely a hotel for young kids. The carpets, doors and decor is busy. Everything is lego and kid-like. There are different room themes. We stayed in the adventure room. This room uses a key card to enter unlike the pirate and princess rooms where you have to carry a...My parents once took me to visit Legoland while we were on a camping holiday in Denmark. It was 1981 and I was nine, the age that the elder of my two sons is now.It was a gentler time. Legoland Billund was the only one of its kind, its key attraction being scale-model replicas of the wonders of the world – plus a Norwegian fishing village – rendered in Lego. As far as I can recall there were no queues, few "rides", and no hard sell of Lego products. There was, however, the chance to drive a Lego car on a Lego street, past Lego road signs, to obtain my Lego driving licence (which I still possess).Black-and-white pictures exist of me, resplendent in a towelling tracksuit, clutching the hand of a large plastic pig in "Fabuland".




Behind my over-large plastic-framed spectacles my eyes are alight with joy.Now, 30-odd years later, I occasionally find myself charting a course to Junction 6 of the M4 and Legoland Windsor, which opened in 1996. Seen through adult eyes, it's a very different sort of place. The queues are dispiritingly long, both to enter the park and to join the rides. The roller coasters and their squirty, splashy, whirling alternatives shout too loudly over the replica Canary Wharf in "Miniland", which seems dusty and neglected.Lunch is a high-volume, three-step affair. 1. Choose your base; 2. Choose your filling; 3. Choose your topping.) There's still a Lego driving school, but now you have to pay for your driving licence. For my children, the light of love seems to shine only in the shop, where ever-grander Lego kits draw them like moths to a burning wallet.So, I wasn't too hopeful about Legoland Windsor's latest innovation, the Legoland Resort Hotel, which opened last weekend. It won me over, though, brick by brick.




The first thing you see as you arrive at Legoland is the hotel's brightly coloured clock tower, with a smoke-belching green Lego dragon lurking above and a quartet of massive Lego "Minifig" characters – if that isn't a contradiction in terms – below. Rigid Lego flags rotate on the roof, careless of the direction of the wind. If you took these trimmings away, the building would belong to the Travelodge school of architecture. With them, children's expectations soar stratospherically high.Inside, a Lego mobile spins at the centre of what is a rather dark lobby, with a low ceiling. In fact, there's Lego everywhere. Behind the reception desks 6,000 Minifigs are pressed against a Lego wall, Lego creations from junior guests stand on the shelves opposite, and a huge bath of Lego provides an unusual distraction near the lifts.Crucially, the hotel has its own car park, which means the first difficulty of a trip to Legoland – queuing for a parking space in a desolate zone far from the main gates – is surmounted.




Access to park is via an entrance at the back of the hotel, and guests are given half an hour's "early bird" access to some rides before it officially opens in the morning.The template for the 150 rooms is that of a mini-suite in one of three themes: Kingdom (knights and princesses), Adventure (Indiana Jones, but not actually Indiana Jones, presumably for licensing reasons) and Pirate. At this point, for brevity, I must introduce a pair of useful terms: Made of Lego (MOL) and Not Made of Lego (NMOL). Our Pirate room contained a mirror in the shape of a ship's wheel (NMOL), skull-and-crossbones motifs (MOL) and a carpet designed like the deck of a ship (NMOL). There was also a treasure chest (NMOL) that the children could open once they'd uncovered a secret code. Inside were prizes (MOL).Our double bed (NMOL) had a sail-like canopy and a swashbuckling red-velvet headboard; the boys had bunk beds. For company, we had a monkey, a parrot, a butterfly and a large rat (MOL, thankfully). The children were entranced, because Lego is always at the forefront: a big box of bricks is supplied for immediate in-room construction purposes.




Downstairs, the Pirate's Splash Pool is small and looks likely to be overwhelmed during peak times, but the airy restaurant – which serves NMOL potatoes in the shape of Lego bricks, but also offers salads and main courses that are far from plastic – is briskly efficient, with helpful staff. The all-you-can-eat evening buffet costs £19.95 for adults (£9.95 for children) and during ours a huge Star Wars Lego Stormtrooper popped over to make friends, which was charming of him. Round the corner, the Skyline Bar serves drinks (emphatically NMOL) with a view of the small stage, where we witnessed a giant pink Lego brick singing "Reach for the Stars".Everywhere you go, there are Lego models: picture frames, flowers, bottles of wine. There's even a huge ice cream made from tasty-looking Lego in the restaurant. Inevitably, there's also an in-house Lego shop, but for once the children found everything else considerably more interesting.I'm all grown up now, and Lego has grown up too. But for a cost-effective mini-break with your own little Minifigs, a stay at the Legoland Hotel fits together rather well.

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