



World Records: Tallest Lego Tower

Venue

Height



Bricks

Date





photo: the 28.21 m tall LEGO tower built at LEGOLAND California in 2005

(source: LEGO Group press release)



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The Unnofficial LEGO Builder's Guide

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The Ultimate LEGO Book

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Milton Keynes (Great Britain) 13.1 m 43 ft 100,000 25-08-1980 London (Great Britain) 15.01 m 49 ft 3 in

29/30-10-1985 Milan (Italy)

15.75 m

51 ft 8 in



1988

Munich (Germany) 16.97 m 55 ft 8 in

180,000 14/20 Aug 1989 Tel Aviv (Israel) 18.15 m 59 ft 6 in 221,560 May 1990 Vienna (Austria) 18.7 m 61 ft 4 in

183,000 Oct 1990 San Franzisco (USA) 19 m 62 ft 4 in



1990 Cascais (Portugal) 19.7 m 64 ft 7 in

250,000 February 1992 Auckland (New Zealand) 19.90 m 65 ft 2 in 248,756 22/23 Feb 1992 Dübendorf (Zürich) (Switzerland) ?

20.61 m 67 ft 7 in

500,000

4/8 Aug 1992 Budapest (Hungary) 21.14 m 69 ft 4 in



May 1993 Brussels (Belgium) 21.36 m 70 ft



26/27 June 1993 Gothenburg (Sweden) 21.63 m 71 ft



Aug 1993 Hongkong 21.91 m 71 ft 11 in



4 April 1994 La Belle Etoile (Luxemburg) 22.13 m 72 ft 6 in

4 Sept 1994 Madrid (Spain) 22.41 m 73 ft 6 in

7-10 Oct 1994 Tåstrup (Denmark) 22.67 m 74 ft 4 in

27 July 1995 Seoul (South Korea)

23.l41 m





1996

Nice (France)? 23.66 m 77 ft 8 in

300,000 1997 Hohenwestedt (Germany) ? 23.95 m 78 ft 7 in

367,700 16 Aug 1997 Moscow (Russia) 24.66 m 80 ft 11 in

387,903 14-19 July 1998 Tallin (Estonia) 24.91 m 81 ft 9 in

391,478 18-21 Aug 1998 Rostov (Russia) 25.71 m 84 ft 4 in



May 2002 Yekaterinburg (Russia) 26.19 m 85 ft 11 in



June 2002 Oostende (Belgium) 26.70 m 87 ft 7 in



Aug. 2002 Legoland Günzburg (Germany) 26.92 m 88 ft 4 in

500,000 12-15 Sep 2002 Legoland Billund (Denmark) 27.22 m

89 ft 4 in

500,000 June 2003 Albergen (Netherlands)

27.44 m

90 ft



May 2004

Legoland California, Carlsbad (USA)

28.21 m

92 ft 6 in

500,000

17-21 Feb 2005

Sønderborg Ringrider-festen Sønderborg (Denmark)

28.48 m

93 ft 5 in



10 July 2006

Legoland California, Carlsbad (USA) 28.74 m

94 ft 3 in

465,000

24-28 May 2007

Toronto (Canada)

29.03 m

95 ft 3 in



17-22 August 2007

Legoland Windsor (Great Britain)

29.26 m

96 ft

500,000

2-5 May 2008

Vienna (Austria)

29.485 m

96 ft 9 in

500,000 2-5 October 2008

Nasu Highland Park (Japan)

29.70 m

97 ft 5 in

430,000

31 March-3 April 2009

Munich (Germany) VIDEO

29.97 m

98 ft 4 in

500,000

1 - 4 Oct 2009

Oslo (Norway)

30.22 m

99 ft 2 in

500,000

21-24 April 2010

Limmen (Netherlands)

30.52 m

100 ft 1 in

700,000

3-6 June 2010

Legoland Günzburg (Germany) 30.76 m

100 ft 10 in

550,000

16-20 August 2010

Santiago (Chile) VIDEO

30.95 m

101 ft 6 in



11-13 November 2010

São Paulo (Brazil) VIDEO

31.16 m

102 ft 3 in



7-10 April 2011

Paris (France) VIDEO

31.60 m



500,000

-24 Oct 2011

Seoul (South Korea) VIDEO

31.9 m

105 ft



9-13 May 2012

Legoland Windsor (Great Britain) VIDEO

32 m





July 2012

Prague (Czech Republic) DETAILS / VIDEO

32.5 m

106 ft 7 in

450,000

5-9 September 2012

Red Clay Consolidated School, Wilmington (USA) VIDEO 34.43 m

112 ft 11 in

500,000

finished 19 August 2013

Budapest (Hungary) VIDEO

34.76 m

114 ft

450,000

21-25 May 2014



Milan (Italy) VIDEO

35.05 m

115 ft

580,000

17-21 June 2015



Legoland Günzburg (Germany) VIDEO

35,47 m

116 ft 4 in

>500,000

24-30 June 2016



Tel Aviv (Israel) VIDEO

35,95 m

117 ft 11 in

>500,000

12-24 December 2017







World Records: Longest LEGO construction

Venue



Length



Bricks

Date

Prague (Czech Republic)

578 m

1895 ft 1,500,834 31 May 1998 Legoland California, Carlsbad (USA) PHOTOS

610.8 m 2004 ft 1,679,100 8/12 July 2000 Legoland Billund



632 m

2073 ft



2001

Auckland (New Zealand)

646 m 2119 ft

1.7 mio July 2001 Brügge (Belgium)

670 m 2198 ft





Legoland Günzburg (Germany)

676 m

2218 ft

> 2 mio

25 July - 16 Aug 2002 Southland Shopping Centre Melbourne (Australia) PHOTOS

1014.8 m 3329 ft > 2 mio

21/22 Sept 2002 Bangkok (Thailand)



1052 m

3451 ft

2,477,140 27 April 2003

Albergen (Netherlands)



1383 m

4537 ft

2.5 mio

May 2004

Montreal (Canada)



1398 m

4597 ft

ca 3 mio

8-15 August 2004

Singapore Expo Hall (Singapore)



1410 m

4626 ft

2,890,580

December 2004

Shopville Le Gru,Grugliasco (Italy)

PHOTOS

1578.8 m

5179 ft

2,901,760

13 February 2005



Longest LEGO Snake

A lego snake measuring 318 m has been built at LEGOLAND Malaysia on 13 February 2013. VIDEO



Largest LEGO Model

The largest LEGO construction was a 4.69 metres (15 ft 4 in) high, 9.39 metres (30 ft 9 in) long and 5.75 metres (18 ft 10 in) wide LEGO house, constructed for the BBC2-TV show James May's Toy Stories in 2009 from 3.3 mio bricks DETAILS



The LEGO model with the most pieces was a 13 m tall model of the London Tower Bridge in Packington Hall, Warwickshire, UK to promote the launch of a new Land Rover car on 28 September 2016. Bright Bricks, a group of LEGO builders led by Duncan Titmarsh needed five months to construct the record-breaking model from 5,805,846 bricks. DETAILS

previous record:



The LEGO model with the most pieces is a model of the X-Wing Fighter - the iconic Star Wars ship - built from 5,335,200 bricks. A team of 32 persons needed a full year from conception to completion. The construction itself took four months. After constructing the model in Kladno (Czech Republic), it was transported to New York in 32 pieces in May 2013. Including the steel infrastructure, the model weights 20,856 kg [45,979 lb]. It is 3.28 m [11 ft] tall, 13.71 m [45 ft] long and has a wingspan of 13.52 m [44 ft]. PHOTOS, VIDEO

Largest permanent LEGO Installation in Minifigure Scale

Largest LEGO Image

104,690 bricks, the record was broken at the



Previous records:





Click

(20 MB / 16 MB)

(Copyright: Toy Museum Bellaire)

Click HERE and HERE for hi-res photos(20 MB / 16 MB)(Copyright: Toy Museum Bellaire)

A logo measuring 7.72 m x 10.4 m (25 ft 4 in x 34 ft 1.5 in) has been built at The Franklin Institute Science Museum on 22 August 2001 in Philadelphia (USA) by over 2,500 people. The logo of the X Games host city Philadelphia was constructed from 180,000 bricks.



Previous record for the largest vertical mosaic: 100,000 bricks, created by the group Fanabriques from Rosheim (France) on 25 June 2011, showing two fire trucks. DETAILS, MORE PHOTOS





Largest LEGO Car



Built in Chicago, and using more than 650,000 LEGO components, the LEGO Group's designers worked for 1,500 hours to design a life-size LEGO Super Car, and the company's model builders and technicians spent a further 4,000 hours assembling it. Though the life-size version of the LEGO car is 10 times bigger than the set sold in stores world-wide, it uses 500 times more LEGO elements. The LEGO Super Car is approximately 4.72 m (15 feet 5 inches) long, 2.28 m (7 feet 5 inches) wide and 1.24 m (4 feet 10 inches) high, weighing more than a ton, making it the biggest LEGO car in the world.

Largest LEGO Ship

A 9.32 m long model of a container ship has been constructed by the professional LEGO builders Design im Stein (Germany) at IdeenExpo in Hannover, Germany in 2011.

An even larger model has been created by DFDS Seaways. However, this model contained a metal frame which does not qualify the ship as a pure LEGO model. DFDS Seaways celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2016 by building a ship named Jubilee Seaways. It was 12.035 m long, 1.67 m wide and weighs just under three tonnes. DETAILS



The largest LEGO ship constructed by a single person is HMS Hood, measuring 6 m [20 ft] by Ed Diment. (DETAILS / PHOTOS) His new project measures even 7 m [23 ft].



Previous records:

Largest LEGO Bridge

David Tidman from the Western Australian Brick Society constructed a 39.32 m long LEGO bridge based on the Akashi Kaikyō Bridge on 3 June 2013 at the Australian Railway Modellers Association, Western Australian Division Exhibition. The bridge had a had a centre span of 20 m. The support towers were 2.95m tall. There were 2 rail lines crossing carrying a variety of rolling stock. DETAILS / VIDEO



The longest bridge within a LEGO train track was built at LEGO World Copenhagen 2011 by the Danish team Byggepladen (led by Knud R. Thomsen). The suspension bridge had a total length of 10.22 m and a free span of 5.61 m. It was passed by two trains during the show. VIDEO



The longest LEGO viaduct was built by Play-Well TEKnologies and the City of Tempe, Arizona (USA) on 19 March 2016. It measured 72.8 m [239 ft] and was built in an hour and a half. PHOTOS and VIDEO



previous records:

The largest LEGO bridge was a 37 m (122 ft) long bridge built on 26 October 2003 at the Cargo Lifter hall near Berlin (Germany) for a TV show dedicated to LEGO.



The widest free span -14 m (46 ft) - had a 20 m long bridge that has been constructed from 16 September - 5 October 2008 at Science Museum Phaeno in Wolfsburg (Germany) from 80,000 bricks. The previous record [about 12.5 m] was for a model of the Gibraltar railway bridge built by Bart Efdé, Benny Efdé and Marco de Vries from 650 kg of bricks.

Longest LEGO Train Track

previous records:

Longest LEGO Train

A LEGO train with 151 carriages (taken from the set 7939) has been successfully constructed at Festi'Briques in

Châtenoy (France) on 30 October 2011. It was moved by seven locomotives (having 10 motors). The total length of the train was 31.5 m. DETAILS / PHOTO / VIDEO

The previous record (and still the record for the longest train pulled by locomotives) was a

LEGO train with 126 carriages, pulled by two locomotives at the First German Lego Train Club meeting in December 2000 at the airport in Braunschweig (Germany)

PHOTO1 | PHOTO2 | PHOTO3 | PHOTO3 | VIDEO



A Maersk train (set 10219) with 121 carriages and six locomotives has been built in by Martin Marmet (Switzerland) in November 2014

Most Storeys in a Spiral Train Tower



Fastest LEGO Train

Largest LEGO Castle

Tallest LEGO Crane

previous records:

Underwater LEGO Construction



11 divers built a LEGO castle from 36,000 pieces in Aufkirchen (Germany)



Longest LEGO Chain

(photo source: obs/UB LEGO Switzerland AG)

Biggest Statue

Largest LEGO Portrait

Largest Display of Minifigs



Largest BrickQuest Board



Largest Set



The largest commercially available LEGO set is the Millennium Falcon (Set Nr. 75192), containing 7541 pieces. Once completed, the model is 84 cm [33 in] long, 21 cm [8 in] tall, and 56 cm [22 in] wide.

The previous record holders were Taj Mahal (set # 10189) with 5922 pieces (51 cm [20 in] wide and 41 cm [16 in] tall) and the "small" Ultimate Collector's Millennium Falcon (set # 10179) with 5195 pieces (84 cm [33 in] long, 56 cm [22 in] wide and 21 cm [8 in] tall)



The largest LEGO Technic set is the Bucket Wheel Excavator (set # 42055) with 3929 pieces. The previous record holder was the Unimog U400 crane with 2,048 pieces (set # 8110).



Most Expensive LEGO Brick

The most expensive LEGO piece was a three troy ounce platinum Avohkii Mask of Light for which Andre Hurley (USA) paid 15,000 US-$ in February 2014. The piece was the grand prize in the Cartoon Network's Toonami Sweepstakes contest in October 2003. This most expensive LEGO brick is a 2x4 brick made from 25.65 g of 14K gold [0.8246 troy oz]. It was given around 1979/80 to LEGO employees that had 25 years of employment at the LEGO factory in Hohenwestedt (Germany) and to a couple of business partners of LEGO. Brick Envy sold such a brick for 14,449.99 US-$ in 2012.



Most Expensive Minifigure

The web site Minifigpriceguide.com has a list of the most expensife minifigs. The first place goes to metal minifigs of the gods Jupiter, Juno and Galileo, which have been sent to Jupiter (which means that in fact they are lost forever for collectors. Place 2 goes to golden minifigs of Boba Fett, where only two exist. They were raffled at 2010 San Diego Comic Con and at Star Wars Celebration V.



Largest Collection

The largest private collection of different completely assembled LEGO sets has been amassed by Frank Smoes (Australia) who has 3,837 sets (as of May 2017)



Fastest Time to Build the Imperial Star Destroyer (Set 10030)

1:42:43 hrs

BricksWest, Carlsbad, California, USA (team of 13)



February 2003

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1:17:33 hrs

1000steine-Land 2003, Berlin, Germany

5 July 2003 1:14:52 hrs

BrickFest DC (USA)



August 2003 1:13:25 hrs

Erik Amzallag, Jean-Louis Bergamo, Sybrand Bonsma, Hans de Vlieger, Hein-Jan Kemperman, Didier Malon, Dirk Plug, Mark van der Horst, Casper van Nimwegen, Rick Zonneveld (Netherlands) at LEGOWORLD 2003

PHOTOS October 2003 1:09:22 hrs

Brickfest PDX in Portland (USA)

VIDEOS 14 February 2004

1:02 hrs

team from Germany





0:54:21 hrs

New England LEGO Users Group (NELUG) at Solomon Pond Mall in Marlborough, Massachusetts (USA)



30 October 2004



Fastest Time to Built the Technic Mobile Crane (Set 8421)

1:55:15 hrs

Bruno Kurth, Tobias Reichling, Jürgen

Lüttgen, Gerhard Auer and Joe Klang at 1000steine-Land 2005 in Berlin (Germany)



Juni 2005



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1:48:14 hrs

Brickfest 2005 (USA)



August 2005

1:36:29 hrs

Jan Albert van Ree, Robert Griebl, Malle Hawking, Dominik Gerlach and Tobias Reichling at Bricking Bavaria 2005 in Kirchheim (Germany)



Oct 2005

1:19:02 hrs

Maico Arts, Martijn Boogaarts, Erik Gusting, Ben Fraters and Dirk Plug at Legoworld 2005 in Zwolle (Netherlands)

PHOTO

24 Oct 2005

1:10:46 hrs

Bruno Kurth, Holger Matthes, Dominik Gerlach, Tobias Reichling and Christian Krützfeldt at the annual meeting of the "1000Steine" community in Frechen (Germany)

7 January 2006



Fastest Time to Built the Technic Tow Truck (Set 8285)

2:09:42 hrs

1000Steine-Land in Berlin (Germany)



Aug 2006





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1:31:44 hrs

Dominik Gerlach, Tobias Reichling, Bruno Kurth, Anders Gaasedal and Casper (Germany / Denmark) at Skaerbaek 2006 PHOTO

30 September 2006

1:15:09 hrs

Maico Arts, Martijn Boogaarts, Gerrit Bronsveld, Ben Fraters and Dirk Plug (Netherlands) at Legoworld 2006 in Zwolle (Netherlands)

PHOTO

21 October 2006



Fastest Time to Built the Eiffel Tower (Set 10181)



1:20:56 hrs

Christian Küpper, Lukas Fritsch, Marco Tagliaferri, Heiko Baum, Stephan Elster (all Germany) and Peter Vingborg (Denmark) at 1000Steine-Land in Berlin (Germany) 25 Aug 2007



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1:15:32 hrs

Tobias Reichling, Bruno Kurth, Dominik Gerlach, Thomas Wesselski (all Germany), Caspar Bennedsen, Lasse Deleuran (both Denmark) at LEGO Fan Weekend in Skaerbaek (Denmark) 30 September 2007

1:14:49 hrs at Legoworld 2007 in Zwolle (Netherlands)





Fastest Time to Built the Millennium Falcon (Set 10179)



2:53:27 hours

Bruno Kurth, Tobias Reichling, Holger Matthes, Jan Katanek, Ewald Full (all Germany), Casper van Nimwegen (Netherlands) and Caspar Bennedsen (Denmark)

1000Steine-Land in Berlin 25 August 2007



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Fastest Time to Built the Taj Mahal (Set 10189)



1:47:09 hours

Marcus Klein, Christian Krützfeldt, Bruno Kurth (all Germany), Thomas Muskovich (Austria), Tobias Reichling und Thomas Wesselski (both Germany)

at LEGO fan weekend in Skærbæk, Denmark 27 September 2008



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Fastest Time to Built the Volkswagen Beetle (Set 10187)



1:03:05 hours

Jürgen Bramik, Bruno Kurth and Tobias Reichling (all Germany) at Lego Fan Welt in Cologne, Germany 9 November 2008



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Fastest Time to Built the Death Star (Set 10188)



2:34:26 hours Maico Arts (Netherlands), Hans de Vlieger (Belgium), Eugene Gerner (Netherlands), Tom Klimek (Germany), Bruno Kurth (Germany) and Dirk Plug (Netherlands) at LEGOWORLD 2008 in Zwolle (Netherlands) Oct 2008



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Fastest Time to Built the Grand Carousel (Set 10196)



1:32 hours Skaerbaek 2009

26 September 2009



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1:24:11 hours Maico Arts, Martijn Bosgraaf, Peter Dijkstra, Eugene Gerner and Dirk Plug (Netherlands) at LEGO World 2009 23 October 2009



Fastest Time to Built the Technic Crane Truck (Set 8258)



1:20 hours Skaerbaek 2009 27 September 2009

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1:13:50 hours Maico Arts, Peter Dijkstra, Eugene Gerner, Sas Pieterse and Dirk Plug (Netherlands) at LEGO World 2009 24 October 2009

Fastest Time to Built the Grand Emporium (Set 10211)



1:11:58 hours Rasmus Damgaard, Frederik Normann, Anders Roed, Morten Roed and Jakob Volf Pedersen (Denmark) at LEGO Fan Weekend in Skaerbaek (Denmark) 25 September 2010

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0:51:24 hours Maico Arts, Peter Dijkstra, Andre van de Horst, Dirk Plug and Leo van de Herik (Netherlands) at Legoworld 2010 in Zwolle (Netherlands) 23 October 2010



Fastest Time to Built the Tower Bridge (Set 10214)



2:10:21 hours Vibeke Brogaard, Anne Mette Vestergård, Per Roed, Stefan Sandbeck and Henrik Christian Grove (all Denmark) at LEGO Fan Weekend in Skaerbaek (Denmark) 26 September 2010

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1:24:38 hours

Peter Dijkstra, Maico Arts, Martijn Bosgraaf, Gerard Salden and Dirk Plug (Netherlands) at Legoworld 2010 in Zwolle (Netherlands) 24 October 2010

1:20:38 hours

Stuart Crawshaw, Naomi Farr, Simon Bennet, James Pegrum und Jamie Douglas (Team Brickish, UK) at BRICK 2014 in the ExCeL London Exhibition and Convention Centre

30 November 2014



Fastest Time to Built the Star Wars Super Star Destroyer (Set 10221)



1:31:38 hours Remi Gagne, Brandon Griffith, Guy Himber, Ace Kim and Tommy Williamson (USA) at Designer Con, Pasadena Convention Center (USA) VIDEO 5 November 2011

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Fastest Time to Built the Millennium Falcon (Set 75192)

Fastest Time to Built the Imperial Star Destroyer (Set 75252)



A team of TNG Technology Consulting (Germany) set a record for unlimited team on 11 October 2019. VIDEO

Great Ball Contraption

previous records:

Longest Distance Thrown by a Medieval War Machine

Largest Legoland Park

The largest LEGO Event

Other Record Breaking LEGO Constructions Christmas Tree: 12 m [39 ft] tall, built on behalf of LEGO UK by a team of Bright Bricks Ltd, led by Ed Diment and Duncan Titmarsh. It took a team of four over a month to build and a week to install the tree at St Pancras station in London. The construction used 600,000 regular LEGO bricks, including those to make the 1,200 baubles.Including the structural steel, base etc it weighted an estimated 3 tonnes. DETAILS

Our photo shows the previous record holder: 9 m (30 ft) tall, diameter 5 m (16 ft), more than 245,000 DUPLO-bricks, weighting 6.3 tons (including the steel construction inside), December 2003, two identical trees have been constructed, One has been placed inside the CentrO shopping centre in Oberhausen, Germany, the other one had a prominent place next to the entrance of LEGOLAND California, Carlsbad (USA)

12 m [39 ft] tall, built on behalf of LEGO UK by a team of Bright Bricks Ltd, led by Ed Diment and Duncan Titmarsh. It took a team of four over a month to build and a week to install the tree at St Pancras station in London. The construction used 600,000 regular LEGO bricks, including those to make the 1,200 baubles.Including the structural steel, base etc it weighted an estimated 3 tonnes. DETAILS Our photo shows the previous record holder: 9 m (30 ft) tall, diameter 5 m (16 ft), more than 245,000 DUPLO-bricks, weighting 6.3 tons (including the steel construction inside), December 2003, two identical trees have been constructed, One has been placed inside the CentrO shopping centre in Oberhausen, Germany, the other one had a prominent place next to the entrance of LEGOLAND California, Carlsbad (USA) Stadium: 5 m x 4.5 m x 1 m (16 ft x 15 ft x 3 ft), 1:50 scale model of the Allianz Arena in Munich, built in 4,209 working hours from 400,000 bricks, LEGOLAND Germany, 2005



5 m x 4.5 m x 1 m (16 ft x 15 ft x 3 ft), 1:50 scale model of the Allianz Arena in Munich, built in 4,209 working hours from 400,000 bricks, LEGOLAND Germany, 2005 Menorah: 2.75 m (9-ft) high, 2.40 m (8-ft) wide, made from 6,000 bricks, Freehold Township, New Jersey (USA), December 2003



2.75 m (9-ft) high, 2.40 m (8-ft) wide, made from 6,000 bricks, Freehold Township, New Jersey (USA), December 2003 DNA molecule: 12 m (39 ft) tall, Experimentarium science centre in Copenhagen (Denmark), November 2003



12 m (39 ft) tall, Experimentarium science centre in Copenhagen (Denmark), November 2003 Caravan : a model of a T@B 320 RS trailer, 3.6 m [11.8 ft] long, 2.2 m [7.2 ft] tall, built by twelve LEGO builders in 12 weeks (over 1,000 man-hours), 215,158 bricks, presented at the Motorhome & Caravan Show 2015 at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham. VIDEO



: a model of a T@B 320 RS trailer, 3.6 m [11.8 ft] long, 2.2 m [7.2 ft] tall, built by twelve LEGO builders in 12 weeks (over 1,000 man-hours), 215,158 bricks, presented at the Motorhome & Caravan Show 2015 at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham. VIDEO Free standing flag: UAE flag built by the Roads and Transport Authority Dubai on 2 November 2015, measuring 3 m x 5 m, built from 146,500 bricks DETAILS

previous record: US-flag measuring 3.60 m x 1.80 m (12 ft x 6 ft), built from 127,624 blue, white and red bricks, Southern California LEGO Train Club, Orange County Fair, 15-17 July 2005 DETAILS



UAE flag built by the Roads and Transport Authority Dubai on 2 November 2015, measuring 3 m x 5 m, built from 146,500 bricks DETAILS previous record: US-flag measuring 3.60 m x 1.80 m (12 ft x 6 ft), built from 127,624 blue, white and red bricks, Southern California LEGO Train Club, Orange County Fair, 15-17 July 2005 DETAILS Model of a LEGO brick: 6 m x 3 m x 2 m (20 ft x 10 ft x 3 ft), weight: 1.5 tons, made from 1 mio bricks, LEGOLAND Germany, 1-9 September 2005

6 m x 3 m x 2 m (20 ft x 10 ft x 3 ft), weight: 1.5 tons, made from 1 mio bricks, LEGOLAND Germany, 1-9 September 2005 Model of a LEGO minifig: a Dutch flower girl measuring 3.648 m, built by AmazingBrickCreations in June 2010 in Limmen, Netherlands



a Dutch flower girl measuring 3.648 m, built by AmazingBrickCreations in June 2010 in Limmen, Netherlands Noah's Ark: built by 152 school children at Harvest Bible Chapel in Elgin, Illinois, USA, 3.6 m [143 in] long, 0.6 m [25 in] wide, 0.3 m [13 in] tall, ark and rainbow were made with over 30000 bricks

built by 152 school children at Harvest Bible Chapel in Elgin, Illinois, USA, 3.6 m [143 in] long, 0.6 m [25 in] wide, 0.3 m [13 in] tall, ark and rainbow were made with over 30000 bricks Crate of Bottles: 12 children and many visitors created a crate of bottles measuring 1.5 m tall from 17,247 bricks in an event organized by FP Sozialfonds e.V. on 18 August 2012 in Passau, Germany DETAILS



12 children and many visitors created a crate of bottles measuring 1.5 m tall from 17,247 bricks in an event organized by FP Sozialfonds e.V. on 18 August 2012 in Passau, Germany DETAILS Gift Pack : 2.5 m x 2.5 m x 1.5 m built from 40,000 bricks at LEGOLAND Discovery Centre Oberhausen (Germany) in December 2014



: 2.5 m x 2.5 m x 1.5 m built from 40,000 bricks at LEGOLAND Discovery Centre Oberhausen (Germany) in December 2014 Stamp: Birthe and Svend Erik Saksun (Denmark) built a replica of a Danish stamp measuring 1,02 m x 1,28 m, using 20.480 LEGO plates 1 x 1 and 20 baseplates 32 x 32. 40 building hours, March 2010 DETAILS

Birthe and Svend Erik Saksun (Denmark) built a replica of a Danish stamp measuring 1,02 m x 1,28 m, using 20.480 LEGO plates 1 x 1 and 20 baseplates 32 x 32. 40 building hours, March 2010 DETAILS QR Code: 4 x 4 m, built on 26 April 2011 at the Bolzano Fair (Italy) from more than 10 000 bricks DETAILS

4 x 4 m, built on 26 April 2011 at the Bolzano Fair (Italy) from more than 10 000 bricks DETAILS Map: a 3D-map of Singapore, built by LEGO Singapore, CapitalLand und MediaCorp (Singapore) am on 30 November 2009, 7,67 m x 4,60 m, 489 432 bricks



a 3D-map of Singapore, built by LEGO Singapore, CapitalLand und MediaCorp (Singapore) am on 30 November 2009, 7,67 m x 4,60 m, 489 432 bricks Deepest LEGO Hole: 11.56 m in 1,203 layers, Ingo Althöfer and team at the University of Jena, Germany on 29 November 2013 DETAILS



11.56 m in 1,203 layers, Ingo Althöfer and team at the University of Jena, Germany on 29 November 2013 DETAILS Trebuchet: Flinger 2.0, length: 1.3 m [50.5 in], width 0.5 m [20.25 in], height 1.9 m [74 in], built by Jeffrey Viens (USA) from more than 5,000 bricks

Flinger 2.0, length: 1.3 m [50.5 in], width 0.5 m [20.25 in], height 1.9 m [74 in], built by Jeffrey Viens (USA) from more than 5,000 bricks Mammoth: 2,47 m tall, 3,80 m long, 1,30 m wide, built by Bright Bricks at the BRICK 2015 in Birmingham



2,47 m tall, 3,80 m long, 1,30 m wide, built by Bright Bricks at the BRICK 2015 in Birmingham Skeleton: Nathan Sawaya (USA) constructed a 6 m long dinosaur skeleton from 80,200 bricks in 2011. VIDEO

Previous record holder for the world's tallest LEGO Christmas Tree

(source: CentrO Management GmbH)



Largest minifig model

(Source: AmazingBrickCreations.com)

