The trio of Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond may be gone from our TV screens for good (or for the near future, depending on which British tabloid you pick up any given morning), but that doesn't mean the cast of "Top Gear" U.K. cannot be replicated on your office table. If all goes well, the Lego brick incarnation of the long-running BBC show could be made into a commercial Lego set that you can buy.

Lego Ideas user FisheeC3 re-created the cast and set of "Top Gear," complete with figures of Clarkson in his trademark late-'80s jeans, May in his aesthetically challenged sweater, Hammond with teeth bright enought to produce lens flares on the TV camera and of course The Stig. What more, there's a wall with guest lap times from the Star in a Reasonably Priced Car segment, TV cameras, a backdrop wall, a main stage for the cast, and a Toyota Hilux truck that the trio just could not destroy.

The stage includes chairs for the three main hosts. FisheeC3

"My goal in designing this set was to create an homage to 'Top Gear' by re-creating some of the most memorable elements of the show... while maintaining a realistic part count," FisheeC3 writes. "Construction techniques include standard stud on top mixed with studs not on top (S.N.O.T.). Parts include a mix of standard, sloped, solid, transparent, technic axles and connectors, and hinges..."

We can't help but think that there will need to be guests: Simon Cowell to critique the trunk of the BMW 7-series, Sir Michael Gambon to frighten the hosts with his driving skills, and our own columnist Jay Leno from Series 13 episode 7 to talk classic cars.

A wall with lap times is also included. FisheeC3

This concept Lego set needs to reach 10,000 votes to advance to the next stage, where the company will evaluate it for production. If it passes that stage with whatever changes Lego has to make in order for it to be easily producible, it will be made into a set that you could buy.

The set itself is not terribly complex from a production standpoint. Aside from the figures, most of the parts are ones that Lego keeps in continuous production, and the number of pieces is not that great: just 540 including the figures.

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