Lego street art spotted in Warsaw, Poland. Via Street Art Utopia.
Keep the kids busy with Morkurokku’s handmade wooden Legos. Each piece is biodegradable so don’t fret if a few get lost along the way. $31 for a set of 50
An uneven stone wall is a fitting spot for Lego bombing.
Chinking? Mosaic? No, it's Lego bombing.
Can you spot the Dispatchwork? It's subtle.
Just another afternoon of local residents going about their business. Via Lazy Haze.
Surely Le Corbusier would approve of this colorful case of Lego bombing. Via Lazy Haze.
Spied on the Archiculture blog: a centuries-old cobbled wall appears to enjoy a little extra support by way of Lego. (Notice the toys filling various nooks and crannies, too.)
A crumbling corner is the perfect surface for a bit of Lego fortification. Via Karmadecay.
500,000 Lego bricks, a crane and the efforts of thousands of children created this giant tower.
One of the finalists from our LEGO contest.
Trace comprises 175 abstracted portraits of prisoners both past and present, rendered with 1.2 million Legos. The colorful medium is a direct, stark contrast to the subject.
The firm created the model for the Lego House in Billund, Denmark, with—what else?—Lego blocks. The building, conceived as a "hands-on, minds-on experience center," is scheduled to be completed in 2016.
The idea for Simon Pillard and Philippe Rossetti’s Lego kitchen island in Paris sprouted when Pillard put 500 blocks and a day’s worth of work into building a Lego-legged chair. They covered their kitchen island—a simple wooden block—with 20,000 Lego pieces.
A wall of Lego pieces in their Santa Cruz shop.
"Cliffside Cantilever" by Daniel Castner.
"Villa Subburbe" by Andrew Black.
The Trace portraits—which include Nelson Mandela, Edward Snowden, and the Tibetan pop singer Lolo—were laid out in the artist's studio in Beijing prior to being sent to Alcatraz.
No current event is spared from satirical Lego renditions.
"Villa Hillcrest" by Kenneth Parel-Sewell.
The Lego stair as a growing playground
A Rafa Kids swing hangs below the loft bed near the large desk designed for playing with Legos.
The custom Lego table reflects a lot of Rael Made designs — clean, simple, modern.
Encourage your imaginative niece, nephew, neighbor, sibling, or child to grow their creativity and curiosity with these fun-filled gifts.
The architects created built-in storage to show off Frank and Amy’s extensive LEGO collection. A glimpse of the couple’s collection can be seen on the left.
The upstairs is a lovely multifunctional space for the owners to go for peace and quiet and views of the garden, but it's also a favorite spot their grandchildren who enjoy playing with Legos.
The space under the staircase houses a Lego version of the John Hancock Center by New York artist Sean Kenney.
Ninety-six individual modules were constructed offsite and fully finished before they were assembled on site like stacked LEGO blocks.
“It’s like Lego for grown-ups,” Fissmer says of Rams’s 606 Universal Shelving System for Vitsœ, which makes another appearance in the office. “It’s a responsible way to handle storage.”