
A scene depicting many of the famous landmarks of the Home of Golf in St. Andrews, Scotland. Includes: the Swilcan Bridge and Swilcan Burn, The Road Hole green, road, and bunker, the stacked stone boundary wall, with the "Auld Grey Toon" city skyline as the backdrop, a familiar setting for golfers on the inward nine.
This elevated Victorian inspired home was built around 1870 and was renovated many times over the years. The hollowed out rock outcropping it sits upon was tuned into a newspaper stand in the 1940's and has been bustling ever since. The house itself was purchased by a family in the 1980's and they have run the Newspaper stand ever since. The kids have even turned the storage area into quite a hang out as well! The stained glass windows were recreated by a local tradesman and the glass canopy that envelops the stairs was added in the early 2000's as a nod to the The Louvre Pyramid.
Mitch always wanted to own a record store, so when the opportunity came to renovate an abandoned restaurant he couldn't turn it down. The ground floor houses the record store and you can take the elevator up through the bedroom and kitchen to the rooftop deck. Mitch loves movies too so you can catch a flick at the outdoor theater while munching on a hot dog. If it's raining, you can get some cover under the decorative pavilion that remains as the last vestige of the building's past.
This is a minifigure-scale model of the façade of Stonewall Inn, a bar in Greenwich Village, New York City, and birthplace of the modern LGBTQIA2S+ Rights Movement. The red vertical sign is as it was on the fateful day in the summer of 1969, when a routine police raid resulted in a riot begun by transgender patrons of the bar. The graffiti on the right window is authentic to the days following the riots, and the window decor and neon sign on the left is how the bar appears today.

This model recreates a historic half-timbered building on the town square (“Torvet”) in Maribo, Denmark. My father grew up in one of the building’s three apartments from the 1930s through the 1950s, and my grandmother lived there until around 1990. The reference photo (1980s) came from a brochure; the inclusion of my grandmother’s caretaker, Jette, was purely coincidental. This LEGO model is a tribute to my family’s history and to the enduring character of traditional Danish architecture.
The Mejeri of Al Medina is a mixed-use building designed in a traditional Islamic architectural style. Set in the fictional North African city Medina Al Musawrah in the 1970's, this building was one of dozens constructed for a group collaboration at Brickfair Virginia in August of 2025. This particular lot is an irregular shaped wedge with 8 sides, and was selected for the unique opportunity to feature a multitude of detailed building façades.

Missed out on the iconic photo? Get your toes close and snap away!

4x scale and functional!

A trilogy of vignettes capturing the beauty Washington's National Parks have to offer


Astronaut Space Girl Mosaic
96x96

A 3D Lenticular Star Wars mosaic

George Lucas creator of Star Wars

