buy lego architecture melbourne

buy lego architecture melbourne

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Buy Lego Architecture Melbourne

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LEGO - Architecture LEGO isn’t just for kids – with LEGO Architecture, you can celebrate the joy of LEGO with the challenge of creating real buildings from around the world.Made with older builders in mind, the Architecture range is perfect as an addition to the office desk, bookshelf or just the growing LEGO collection. There are several iconic buildings to choose from, including the Trevi Fountain in Rome, the Louvre in France and Big Ben in England. Construction is a little more complex but the results are well worth the challenge, making this a great step up for older children and architecture enthusiasts.The Architecture range is appropriate for people aged 12 and above. We have a great range online and in store, so feel free to browse below or find a physical location near you to see the grandeur of this more adult range in person. Show MoreRefine Your Selection Available In Store Only Available Online And In Store ARCHITECTURE LEGO LEGO Architecture No filters 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 23 24 26 27 No filters 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 18 65 95 99 100 101 104 Sort by --Price




: Lowest firstPrice: Highest firstProduct Name: A to ZProduct Name: Z to AIn stockReference: Lowest firstReference: Highest first Sort by --Price: Lowest firstPrice: Highest firstProduct Name: A to ZProduct Name: Z to AIn stockReference: Lowest firstReference: Highest firstHere’s my LEGO Melbourne star observation wheel. At just over 3m in diameter it is unquestionably the most difficult thing I have ever built. It is fully motorised using LEGO power functions using just over 30,000 bricks. The hardest part was the maths and process in doing a 7 pointed star held by a flying buttress while being powered. (I have no idea if there are bigger LEGO wheels around, if there is I’m yet to see one) The model is mounted on permanent display in the gift shop after you ride the observation wheel. The kids and I are in this shot just for scale! The Melbourne star opens tomorrow (the 23rd of December, check it out!)Why are our prices cheaper ? Because we lower our prices the right way!




We eliminate needless expenses through our online-only approach which is built to save. I received my order this morning!! That is the fastest order I have ever had online. Great service- thanks a lot. Thank you so much for the amazingly quick overnight delivery. Will certainly purchase from your site again and have been recommending it to all my friends. We have recently discovered your site and love it! Super fast postage too. I cannot get over the fact that my order was delivered today - I have NEVER had such speedy delivery from ANY online store - FANTASTIC!!!! We received our LEGO today. I found your company to be extremely professional and very easy to deal with. I will definitely use you again. Just want to say we rec'd the parcel we ordered after only ordering it yesterday, Great Service guys, Thankyou Received my order TODAY and am thrilled with it! Placing an order through your website was so simple & stress-free (in particular being able to purchase a particular item of Lego which is now impossible to find in stores!)




Thanks for the delivery of my order and for keeping me updated about the delivery progress. Im sure my 30 year old big kid son will love the Lego Simpsons House which is his birthday gift. thank you very much for your fantastic service! absolute pleasure to deal with you. I will most certainly be ordering again from you in the future and will also be spreading the word about your website and the WONDERFUL customer service and fast delivery to anyone who will listen! Thankyou again, so very much! I am a VERY happy & impressed customer!Will certainly purchase from your site again and have been recommending it to all my friends.The whole process of purchasing from you was stress-free I just wanted to thank you for the amazing customer service Can I just say that you are brilliant!! You had the items when it said they were in stock, the items arrived very quickly and I was kept up to date constantly by email I'm not exaggerating when I say I purchase a LOT of toys online...




However, I don't think I've ever received an item as quickly as yours! I ordered it yesterday afternoon and it was in my hands at 8:30am this morning.I will certainly use your website again and tell everyone I know how thrilled I was with your service.The Sydney Opera House is one of the three Lego Architecture models coming out this year, along with London's Big Ben and South Korea's Namdaemun Gate. It's a neat small construction. The $40 set—model 21012—includes 270 pieces.The Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei is squaring off against the creative toy company in a global protest. The Lego company is taking a stand against art. According to Ai Weiwei, the Chinese dissident artist, the Lego company has refused an order that he placed for bricks that he intends to use for an exhibition in Melbourne. This would be Ai’s second big show to involve Lego toys, after a 2014 exhibition at the former penitentiary on Alcatraz Island featuring portraits of famous dissidents from around the world made out of Legos.




The Lego company may not want to associate its brand with Ai Weiwei. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that his show won’t go on. Ai took to Instagram to appeal to his legion of followers to donate LEGO bricks at global drop-off spots to support “a new work to defend freedom of speech and ‘political art.’” He’s pitching this collection provocation in support of his Australia show as a performance of sorts in and of itself. Ai hasn’t released too many details about how these Lego collection centers are supposed to work (including any indication of how many cities will be involved). But the instructions he has produced add up to a global spectacle. Here are a few pertinent details, via the artist’s Instagram: 1. Ai Weiwei Studio is organizing a number of Collection Points in different cities. 2. Ai Weiwei would like to rent, borrow, or buy second-hand a BMW 5S Series sedan, of which the color can vary, as a Lego container. The vehicle must have clear windows and a sunroof that can be fixed open with a 5-cm opening so that people can insert Legos.




It should be free of any advertising or other decoration. 3. The car should be parked and locked in a central location of the city that can be easily accessed by the public. The vehicle should remain in the parking space for one month or a longer period of time, preferably in a location related to arts or culture, indoor or outdoor. So Ai is now spinning off a meta-political global tour about the politics of Legos, adding to his exhibitions that deploy Legos for political purposes. For Trace, part of his 2014 show in Alcatraz, Ai created portraits of 176 different dissidents, from Lolo, the Tibetan singer, to Edward Snowden, the American whistle-blower. Ai’s Lego portraits were joined by Stay Tuned, a series of site-specific sound installations placed throughout the notorious prison’s space featuring recordings by such groups and figures as Fela Kuti, Pussy Riot, and Mahjoub Sharif.  Ai himself was neither able to make the portraits by hand nor see the exhibition in person: At the time, he was still unable to leave Beijing, thanks to the travel restrictions placed on him by his government.




A photo posted by Ai Weiwei (@aiww) on Oct 24, 2015 at 3:22pm PDT The Lego company is quite eager, on the other hand, to associate its brand with China. That may explain why the company is poking one of the most popular political artists in the world. Lego is building a new factory in Jiaxing, not far from its Asia distribution center in Shanghai. The stock shock in China hasn’t given the company pause: Lego still sees the Chinese market as its greatest opportunity for growth, Bloomberg reports. “Anything associated with Lego seems to flourish in Asia at the moment,” The Economist observed back in 2013. (The Lego company is betting big on China’s so-called “pussycat mom” demographic, meaning parents that embrace Western-style playtime for their children.) Lego isn’t alone in feeling the pressure to conform. Earlier this month, Stephen Colbert described the heat that China places on corporations to comply with its cultural edicts as the “Pander Express.” Hollywood studios either edit their exports or miss out on the lucrative Chinese market.




Companies that run afoul of China’s censors, even indirectly, face real consequences. “Sales of Norwegian salmon fell nearly 60 per cent after an angry Beijing imposed strict new inspections following the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to imprisoned dissident Liu Xiaobo,” The Globe and Mail reports. A video posted by Ai Weiwei (@aiww) on Oct 27, 2015 at 9:08am PDT Yet, the Lego company could come to regret this decision. Art is part of the Lego brand, and that facet of the company’s identity won’t stand against the sort of sustained cultural bombardment that Ai appears to have in mind. Olafur Eliasson is just one artist to use Lego bricks for a major recent installation; surely artists like Eliasson will choose solidarity with Ai over using Lego bricks as a medium in the future. Architecture sets like the Lego Louvre or the Lego Guggenheim could disappear from the gift shops of museums and cultural centers everywhere. Small points of purchase, sure, but potential opportunities for highly visible art institutions to side with a beloved artist.




In fact, museums could volunteer to host all those BMW 5S sedans that Ai means to park around the world. Of course, the loss of an elite Western art-loving audience cannot possibly mean more to Lego than the gain of market share in China. Still, it’s not for nothing for that a toy that has come under fire for its approach to girls and gender now finds itself inadvertently marketed as anti-creative, anti-expression, anti-free speech. Asked for a response, Lego sent along a statement saying that the company “respect[s] any individuals’ right to free creative expression, and we do not censor, prohibit or ban creative use of LEGO bricks.” However, the company added that it in fact does censor, prohibit, and ban certain kinds of speech: As a company dedicated to delivering creative play experiences to children, we refrain—on a global level—from engaging in or endorsing the use of LEGO bricks in projects that carry a political agenda. Individuals may obtain LEGO bricks in other ways to create their LEGO projects if they so desire, but in cases where we receive requests for donations or support for projects—such as the possibility of purchasing LEGO bricks in very large quantities—and we are aware that there is a political context, we uphold our corporate policy and decline the request to access LEGO bricks directly.

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