where to buy cheap lego in sydney

where to buy cheap lego in sydney

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Where To Buy Cheap Lego In Sydney

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Calling all Super Heroes and Super-Villains to The Art of the Brick: DC Comics, exclusive to the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney. Created by legendary LEGO® artist Nathan Sawaya, this contemporary art exhibition uses over a million bricks to create more than 120 large-scale sculptures of the most enduring Super Heroes and Super-Villains: from Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman, to The Joker and Harley Quinn. Spread across 10 distinct galleries, it is the world’s largest collection of DC Comics-inspired LEGO artwork, ever! The Art of the Brick: DC Comics showcases Sawaya’s interpretations on characters, vehicles, environments and themes found throughout the DC Comics mythology including transformation and reinvention, strength and weakness, as well as good vs. evil. Get ready to inspire the hero within! Due to popular demand, this exhibition has been extended until Monday 13 June 2016. NEW SCULPTURE ADDED TO THE EXHIBITION: A new, large-scale sculpture made from over 30,000 LEGO® bricks has been unveiled for the final weeks of the exhibition.




Called ‘Showdown’, it features an epic confrontation between Batman and Superman and its release coincides with the Australian launch of Warner Bros. Pictures film Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Are you a MAAS Member? Access exclusive member prices here You will need to present your MAAS Membership card along with your tickets on entry to the exhibition.HUGE Online Savings on Discount Party Supplies at Australia’s Favourite Party Shop As Australia’s biggest and best party supply shop, Party Savers is your one-stop party shop for everything you need to put the finishing touches on your event! Offering the best quality themed decorations right here in Sydney, you’ll find everything you need to make your party a hit at our online store! Offering a personalised service to each customer, we can advise you on how much you need and when you need it while delivering the best price on trusted party supply brands in Australia and internationally. Why not visit us open 7 days a week in Chatswood or Brookvale, or start shopping Online at any time!




At Party Savers we want your party to be a memorable one, so why not call or use our chat service to ask for ideas or opinions on our huge range of competitively priced party decorations. Our trained and experienced staff will gladly assist you in selecting the best possible balloon arrangement, decoration theme or help you get the best bang for your buck with our value range. Importing party supplies from the UK, USA and China to our warehouse in Sydney, our range will not be beaten on quality, availability, choice and most importantly price! Start shopping online today! Make a lasting impression on your guests and decorate your party space with affordable party decorations from Party Savers. Our massive range of party goods includes themed kids party supplies,  cheap balloons themed piñatas or our expert  helium hire services. Party Savers is sure to have exactly what you’re looking for when it comes to cheap party decorations because our bulk buying power gives you the most competitive prices on all party supplies in Sydney with delivery across Australia starting at $9.95.




Whether you're hosting a birthday party for kids, a Halloween party, a baby shower, or celebrating the holidays, Party Savers has you covered with our huge range of affordable party supplies to suit any theme. Browse the largest range of boys' and girls' themed party supplies, party supplies for adults, wedding and engagement parties and party supplies for any other occasion or event. Our kids themed parties range from licenced party supplies like Dora the Explorer decorations for the young ones, Star Wars decorations or Disney princess decorations to make an impression for any age group. It's not only the kids who have all the fun, our range of party supplies also covers more grown up events like your 1920's gangster theme party, a Hawaiian summer party for work, or a Nautical party theme to wish happy travels to your lucky friends. See our huge range of themes for yourself by browsing our online store 24/7 or visiting our stores in Brookvale and Chatswood, open seven days a week!




Costumes, dress-ups and accessories are a great way to make a birthday or event memorable. Party savers offer costumes and accessories for sale delivered Australia wide and we can even help you decide on a costume idea, or grab that last-minute costume for when you didn't know you needed to dress up! Shop online for your themed party costumes from Superheroes, through Historical costumes to 1920s Flappers and more. There are a ranged of children’s costumes and men and women’s costumes. Order online today for Australian delivery or come in to our Sydney store in Chatswood and Brookvale. Save more and party more with Australia's best party shop, Party Savers. Chat to us live about our products with the tab to the right of screen. Your Lego® set guide The LEGO Group takes action against clone brand LEPINPosted by TheBrickPal, 22 Sep 2016 14:47 An interesting bit of news from the Community Engagement Team at LEGO: We would like to confirm that the LEGO Group have recently filed civil actions in China against the manufacturer and distributor of LEPIN/??




Our cases have been accepted by Chinese courts and are now pending for trials. We expect the 1st instance decision to be handed down in approximately one years’ time. Please note that LEPIN will not be legally barred from marketing and selling its products while the case is being heard by the courts. We deeply appreciate and share the LEGO community's concern and frustration about passing-off or imitation of LEGO® products. We are committed to do whatever necessary to protect the LEGO brand and products against undue exploitation, and to minimize the risk of consumers being misled via improper use of LEGO Group intellectual property assets. We want to thank all of you for your loyalty and support. Please feel free to share this message. On behalf of the LEGO Group, Return to home page »$1 from every sale is donated to Brisbane's Royal Children's Hospital Foundation. In June, a convoy of 80 semi-trailers snaked their way down the Hume Highway from Sydney to the Rules Club Wagga Wagga in the NSW Riverina.Each truck carried a 26 square metre fully completed guest room and bathroom.




Once delivered alongside the construction site, these modules were stacked like building blocks to a height of three stories alongside a small traditionally built lobby and office, then clad and finished to create a new 4-star Quality Hotel.From start to finish the $10 million modular hotel will take just seven months to build, cutting construction time by almost half, slashing wastage six-fold and delivering hotel rooms at $110,000 a key – "significantly cheaper" than a traditional hotel build, according to Trent Fraser, Asia Pacific CEO of Choice Hotels.The club will own and operate the new hotel under a franchise agreement with Choice Hotels, providing accommodation to corporate guests during the week and leisure and sporting visitors to Wagga on the weekend. Also under construction is the $30 million Tribe Hotel in West Perth. Developed by the Tribe Hotel Group and its BRW richlister joint venture partners, Salta Properties and Victor Smorgon Group, "It's the first modular-constructed hotel in Australia fully funded by an Australian bank [the Commonwealth Bank] and it's created a platform for other operators," Fraser says.




"There's lots of sporting clubs in metro and regional ares with vacant or available land so I see huge opportunities in this space."Thousands of kilometres away, in Perth, ASX-listed Mantra Group will open two new prefabricated hotels before the end of the year: rising 17 storeys, the $25 million Peppers Kings Square in the CBD, featuring modular bathrooms, pre-attached facades and precast concrete panels designed by the Hickory Group, will be the tallest prefabricated hotel in Australia.Also under construction is the $30 million Tribe Hotel in West Perth. Developed by the Tribe Hotel Group and its BRW richlister joint venture partners, Salta Properties and Victor Smorgon Group, all 126 rooms are prefabricated, consisting of 63 fully fitted two-room modules, built in a factory in China, then shipped to Perth to be "stacked up like Lego"."Gone are the days of traditional hotel design," says Mantra Group's director of acquisitions, Michael Moret-Lalli. "Modular-built hotels are the emerging trend."




One the room blocks are in place the external cladding is completed. Left Jack Jolley, general manager of Wagga Wagga Rules Club and Conrad Axton, director Axian Group. Hotel construction boomsThese state-of-the art hotels are part of pipeline of more than 8000 hotel rooms under construction across Australia as the country experiences its biggest hotel construction boom since the late 1980s.With occupancy rates rising nationally, led by 85 per cent plus levels in Sydney and Melbourne, and room rates lifting as well, new hotel developments are stacking up better financially.At the same time, developers, investors and operators are getting smarter about delivering a carefully curated hotel experience that meet the needs of increasingly fragmented traveller market. The room "blocks", which have been delivered by truck, are stacked like bricks. Wagga Wagga's new Rules Club hotel. "Its now about return per sqm" says Moret-Lalli. "For many new hotels, you don't need the big back-of-house facilities or the big conference rooms or multiple restaurants.




Now everything is very tailored and cost engineered for maximum return."At the more budget-conscious end of the market, tech-savvy millennials with a thirst for well-designed, high-quality finishes and seamless social spaces are driving modular hotel construction and more efficiently designed hotels in fringe CBD and suburban locations. "They don't spend a lot of time in their room, so these can be smaller. But they must be well fitted and offer the best in terms of technology," says Moret-Lalli.Meeting the demands of the modern traveller is perhaps best personified in Intercontinental Hotel Group's fast expanding limited service Holiday Inn Express chain and its catch-phrase: "Giving guests everything they need and nothing they don't." A room is lowered into place at the new Rules Club at Wagga Wagga. Axion Group is using prefabricated components. It is a unique construction that involves bringing nearly complete hotel rooms on a truck and putting them together - a bit like Lego.




Fourteen of these limited service hotels are under development in Australia, with one in Macquarie Park already completed, as part of a franchise agreement between developer and operator Pro-invest and IHG.Redesigned rooms"As construction and operational costs rise and land becomes more expensive, hoteliers need to do more with less but still deliver on guest expectations and ensure a great return for owners," says Matthew Tripolone, IHG's head of development in Australasia.Rooms in Holiday Inn Expresses are about 30 per cent smaller than a traditional hotel room, measuring 19-20 square metres. But space has been maximised and optimised to suit the needs of guests. Innovations include removing desks from rooms in favour of flexible workspaces and designing bathrooms with a single door for both the shower and bathroom itself to get the most out of the space."We've scaled back on desks in rooms in favour of flexible workspaces. The corporate traveller does not want or need a corporate desk.




They prefer a day bed or coffee table to work on," says Tripolone.Holiday Inn Express foyers are also designed for the most efficient use of space; the reception desk doubles as a restaurant and bar with staff trained to check guests in, pour them a drink and serve them a sandwich.While the hotel offers small meeting rooms, there are no conference facilities because most guests conduct their business meetings at other locations. There's also no traditional hotel restaurant, because guests tend to work long hours or go out for dinner."We cater for a guest who wants a good, functional room with good technology, that requires breakfast and close access to their place of business," Tripolone says.The Holiday Inns are still being built using traditional pre-cast concrete methods, but Mr Tripolone says IHG is exploring exploring modular builds."We are not yet seeing the significant savings that we would like to see from this technology, but are continuing to work on various options."




Luxury sticks with tradition Traditional building methods still dominate the more luxury end of the hotel market. But the exorbitant cost of land in the major capital cities - a factor of the high-rise apartment boom - is driving another major innovation: hotels as part of mixed-use precincts. "A hotel component makes sense as part of broader precinct with multiple income sources and demand drivers. The hotel usually forms the cornerstone of the development and is its heart and soul," says Mantra's Moret-Lalli."The hotel helps drive residential sales in the development by offering residents value-add hotel services like valet parking, house-keeping and room service.Moret-Lalli says developers have a preference for luxury hotels because they add "a bit more cache" – as seen with plans for a six-star Crown casino and hotel at Barangaroo and the 600-room Sofitel Sydney Darling Harbour hotel, which will open next year as part of the new $3.4 billion International Convention Centre at Darling Harbour.In Brisbane, listed construction firm Watpac is building three new hotels that are typical of the mixed-use philosophy.




Watpac is building BRW rich lister Sam Chong's $325 million Mary Lane development in the CBD featuring a 286-room Westin Hotel plus shops and apartments within a 37-level tower, while out at the airport Watpac is constructing the Flynn brothers' $150 million Brisbane Airport Hotels and Conference Centre incorporating a 5-star, 130 room Pullman Hotel and 3.5 star, 243 room Ibis Hotel."For a long time the investment equation did not stack up. Hotels had a reputation for only making a profit for the second owner, so there was heavy under-investment," says Watpac managing director Martin Monro"The variables have changed and it's now much more economical. At the same time hotels are reinventing themselves, becoming parts of broader activations, as you see with Mary Lane. "In this case, the developer is leveraging off the hotel lobby, traditionally an exciting and vibrant place, an adding retail and residential."At the airport development, Monro says building a conference centre with a hotel on either side creates size and scale and delivers critical mass.




"The word is full of uninspiring airport hotel precincts. This will not be one of them."Far away from the bright lights of Brisbane, the Wagga Wagga Rules Club board and its members are excitedly awaiting the opening of the Quality Inn in about four weeks' time."We initially had reservations [about a modular hotel] but we went and saw and existing modular-built hotel in Bendigo and were satisfied that the quality would be excellent," said club general manager Jack Jolly."We moved on from the cheapness of containerised systems," says Conrad Axton, a director at Sydney-based Axian Group, who acted as project managers and specialist modular consultants on the project."The [Wagga Wagga] hotel is one of the most innovative and efficiently developed hotels and conference centres in the country thanks to its unique off site construction and modular delivery method. It's landmark in Australian hotel construction."Looking at the finished hotel, you would not know its modularised."

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