Berliner Boersenzeitung - Hungarian Lego artist wows with his very grand designs

EUR -
AED 4.26234
AFN 80.247562
ALL 97.693077
AMD 445.701515
ANG 2.076843
AOA 1064.125476
ARS 1462.158694
AUD 1.779752
AWG 2.088796
AZN 1.971182
BAM 1.954036
BBD 2.343584
BDT 140.792909
BGN 1.953694
BHD 0.437478
BIF 3458.862851
BMD 1.160442
BND 1.490948
BOB 8.020829
BRL 6.458906
BSD 1.160652
BTN 99.721554
BWP 15.677051
BYN 3.798471
BYR 22744.672845
BZD 2.331515
CAD 1.59276
CDF 3349.036392
CHF 0.932085
CLF 0.029243
CLP 1122.194423
CNY 8.32388
CNH 8.337135
COP 4681.526728
CRC 585.668805
CUC 1.160442
CUP 30.751726
CVE 110.165556
CZK 24.642806
DJF 206.695202
DKK 7.463328
DOP 69.996815
DZD 151.070012
EGP 57.360909
ERN 17.406637
ETB 160.579332
FJD 2.617263
FKP 0.866353
GBP 0.865945
GEL 3.145121
GGP 0.866353
GHS 12.100182
GIP 0.866353
GMD 82.968374
GNF 10072.907391
GTQ 8.905961
GYD 242.832892
HKD 9.109404
HNL 30.362592
HRK 7.530688
HTG 152.402429
HUF 399.801481
IDR 18909.990629
ILS 3.8947
IMP 0.866353
INR 99.782154
IQD 1520.527451
IRR 48883.639739
ISK 142.189208
JEP 0.866353
JMD 185.60246
JOD 0.822789
JPY 172.598991
KES 149.96385
KGS 101.480344
KHR 4652.779982
KMF 492.752928
KPW 1044.458026
KRW 1614.41344
KWD 0.354869
KYD 0.967239
KZT 612.134801
LAK 25025.625531
LBP 103998.718662
LKR 350.014049
LRD 232.721932
LSL 20.835093
LTL 3.426485
LVL 0.70194
LYD 6.305308
MAD 10.501656
MDL 19.708464
MGA 5115.42649
MKD 61.504481
MMK 2435.867351
MNT 4162.167118
MOP 9.385109
MRU 46.171322
MUR 52.973895
MVR 17.87064
MWK 2012.70052
MXN 21.830685
MYR 4.926064
MZN 74.221622
NAD 20.835093
NGN 1773.446375
NIO 42.711445
NOK 11.946642
NPR 159.554973
NZD 1.953114
OMR 0.4462
PAB 1.160662
PEN 4.133169
PGK 4.802727
PHP 66.28909
PKR 330.767523
PLN 4.258942
PYG 8987.886817
QAR 4.22059
RON 5.072409
RSD 117.140843
RUB 90.796006
RWF 1677.200478
SAR 4.352503
SBD 9.654371
SCR 17.035752
SDG 696.845074
SEK 11.322014
SGD 1.491284
SHP 0.911926
SLE 26.05196
SLL 24333.903417
SOS 663.309818
SRD 43.475397
STD 24018.816662
SVC 10.155833
SYP 15087.935593
SZL 20.796228
THB 37.772979
TJS 11.113664
TMT 4.073153
TND 3.413619
TOP 2.717872
TRY 46.717657
TTD 7.875857
TWD 34.162235
TZS 3034.557535
UAH 48.604854
UGX 4159.245533
USD 1.160442
UYU 46.947621
UZS 14831.611804
VES 135.5687
VND 30357.175592
VUV 138.583923
WST 3.195047
XAF 655.362594
XAG 0.030537
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.136154
XDR 0.815566
XOF 655.373879
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.073022
ZAR 20.793348
ZMK 10445.375827
ZMW 26.464339
ZWL 373.662009
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Hungarian Lego artist wows with his very grand designs
Hungarian Lego artist wows with his very grand designs / Photo: ATTILA KISBENEDEK - AFP

Hungarian Lego artist wows with his very grand designs

To build his giant Lego structures which usually take hundreds of thousands of bricks, Hungarian artist Balazs Doczy first must solve major "engineering challenges".

Text size:

"Every structure has an Achilles' heel. Once it is solved, the rest of the work is easy," the 48-year-old told AFP.

He needed 90 helpers for one of his most recent works -- a life-sized Lego tram made up of a staggering 1.8 million pieces.

Together they put in around 6,800 hours to assemble Doczy's most ambitious project that is now on display in a bustling square in central Budapest.

The 11-metre-long (36 feet) Lego tram -- commissioned by Budapest's transport companies and its tourist office to "public transport and creativity" -- has attracted droves.

"We've never seen anything like this before," said Malaysian tourist Lucas Chang, 32, while dance coach Barbara Rajnai said children in her son's and daughter's kindergarten told them to check it out.

- 'Megastructures' -

A professional Lego artist for more than 10 years, Doczy works more like an architect than a builder, relying on specialist software to draw up plans and only assembling bricks when he needs to test out a particular design.

"Initially, I do preliminary sketches much like a painter, stacking bricks on each other in a digital environment," he said.

"I set up the scale, identifying recognisable elements and proportioning the other parts relative to that."

For his intricate dioramas, such as his model of the Heroes' Square in Budapest, every piece has to imitate a specific detail.

In "megastructures" such as the tram, imperfections even as small as a tenth of a millimetre could stack up, leading to instability, he said.

"I always compare it to quantum mechanics and gravity: in a smaller scope matter behaves differently than on a grander scale," he said.

Thus blocks are glued together, an internal frame is added for extra support, and experts are consulted to ensure structural integrity.

Doczy also added some baseplates on its sides to allow people to place their own Lego bricks, which "has always appealed to me, because it allows anyone to express their creativity and transform the sculpture into a community piece".

Doczy was fascinated with Lego at an early age, assembling bricks with his older brother, though Western products were in short supply in then-communist Hungary.

"We begged the neighbour's kids to bring their sets too, so we could build bigger structures. We had ambitions even back then," Doczy recalled.

His childhood passion was reignited years later when his nephew became captivated by the colourful blocks.

When he looked at his brother, "our eyes lit up and we realised we should start building again," Doczy said.

Moving back to Hungary from Indonesia -- where he had been teaching diving -- he and his brother set up a business called "Brick Workshop" in 2013 to create Lego designs and organise activities for children and adults.

- 'Too valuable to throw' -

In 2014, Doczy's Lego model of Budapest's iconic St. Stephen Basilica was featured at a Guinness World Record attempt, when volunteers constructed the world's highest Lego tower at the time in front of the basilica.

Three years later, he was officially recognised as a "Lego certified professional" (LCP) by the Danish company.

The coveted title -- currently held by around two dozen creators -- is awarded to talents who "create stunning, innovative designs that help push the boundaries of creativity and engineering," a Lego spokesperson told AFP.

The perks are being able to regularly consult with other LCPs and access Lego's sculpting software that allows Doczy to order "from the 14,000 different pieces in production", he said.

But for some projects, he has to scour the thriving second-hand market to search for pieces. Luckily for him, even bricks from the 1970s can be found there.

"As a diver, I've never seen Lego bricks pulled out of the sea," said Doczy, who divides his time between Budapest and the Spanish island of Mallorca. "They are just too valuable to be thrown away."

(K.Müller--BBZ)