Tag Archives: lego

Legoland – which part don’t you understand?

When I grew up in Germany during the 1960s and early 70s there was hardly any programming on TV. Computers? Internet? Yeah, right!

But there were LEGOs. Practically every kid I knew had a box full. I had a big box. And every day after coming home from school and finishing my homework I just built stuff. At that time there wasn’t quite such a huge selection of different LEGO elements as there is today. But we still built airplanes, ships, castles, spaceships, rockets, trains, you name it.

The time came when other things became more important in life than building LEGOs. I guess my mom gave the LEGO box away when I moved out. But little did I know back then that several decades in the future I would take my very own kids to Legoland in Ulm, Germany.

Here some of the impressive mini-towns and cities built entirely from LEGOs.

The first three shots are in the Berlin set.

Berlin Reichstag
Berlin Reichstag
Berlin Cathedral
Berlin Cathedral
I like this train bridge
I like this train bridge

Many of the settings include rivers and lakes featuring real water.

Netherlands scene, love the boat
Netherlands scene, love the boat
Venice with lots of canals
Venice with lots of canali
The famous Rialto bridge in Venice
The famous Rialto bridge in Venice

And upon closer looking you find out that all the plants are alive! Trees, shrubs, grass covers. Once you build the structures they stay there. They are glued together. But there are actual gardeners pruning and tending to all the green stuff. That makes everything look so real.

All trees, shrubs, grass, etc. in Legoland are real, 100% organic
More trees in teh Netherlands set
More trees in the Netherlands set
Check out the grass, lovely
Check out the grass, lovely
real grapes, probably not, but real plants nonetheless
Real grapes? Probably not, but real plants nonetheless.
You gotta go when you gotta go. The little things you see these Lego people do.
You gotta go when you gotta go. The little things you see these Lego people do.

Airports, harbors, trains, hundreds of cars and trucks, I spent hours finding new stuff to look at.

Frankfurt airport with a cut-open Airbus A380
Frankfurt airport with a cut-open Airbus A380
Hamburg harbor. Check out the soar panels on the roof to the left.
Hamburg harbor. Check out the solar panels on the roof to the left.
The solar cells make power for that ferris wheel.
The solar cells make power for that ferris wheel.
What's this riverboat doing here?
What is the riverboat doing here?
Frankfurt with it's skyline in the background
Frankfurt with it's skyline in the background
This stadium is in a smaller scale
This stadium is in a smaller scale. There must be thousands of the small Lego people.
Summit station up in the Swiss mountains
Summit station up in the Swiss mountains
...and right behind the station in the woods, a fracking UFO with green aliens.
...and right behind the station in the woods, a fracking UFO with green aliens.

Fractals in action? From the distance this looks like it’s made up of pretty big Lego technics elements. But if you get closer you notice that the big blocks are themselves built from real, smaller blocks.

Lego technics dino, big Lego blocks, right?
Lego technics dino, big Lego blocks, right?
....see the details? All the big parts....
....see the details? All the big parts....
...are themselves built from real Lego blocks.
...are themselves built from real Lego blocks.

I hope you enjoyed this little trip to Ulm, Germany.

Improvising with LEGOs

My wife actually got me a set of LEGO Mindstorms for my birthday. I am done buying guitars. For those who don’t know what Mindstorms are:
These are LEGO Technic (not the blocks but the parts that let you build all sorts of vehicles, airplanes, cranes, robots – probably guitars if you push it). The set comes with a few motors, sensors and a small computer which holds programs that control whatever robot – or thing – you build.

Here’s the musical analogy part:
As I am toying around with this I realize that having all the hundreds of parts in one big box really slows things down. Especially finding these very small pins takes time. On a trip to the hardware store I bought a few compartmentalized boxes people use to hold screws and other small stuff on their work benches and then I sorted all parts out and now I can find them quickly.

Somehow that whole process of learning what actually to do with this stuff reminded me of learning about jazz.

1) you start with a big, unsorted box of LEGOs

2) you put together small things from a few blocks to see how it works

3) you look at existing models and try to copy them

4) you start getting a little experience, what parts you can use for which job

5) you start organizing parts so you don’t always have to search in the big box

6) you become aware of what you actually CAN build with what you have

7) you organize your LEGOs in various compartmentalized boxes

8) you develop a ‘style’, things you like to built

9) you start re-using subsections you developed

10) your perception of what you CAN and WANT to build is intimately connected to how you organized the components

11) over time you might actually store pieces you NEVER use in a separate box

blah, blah

This could go on and on. From my perspective this is pretty much how we learn to improvise. Seems the main thing is to not sort our parts too much. You want to keep access to the big, unsorted box of ideas.

I guess I am getting old and a bit bored by ‘what scale goes over what chord’.