Lego Modular Houses
Encyclopedia
Modular Buildings is a series of Lego
Lego
Lego is a line of construction toys manufactured by the Lego Group, a privately held company based in Billund, Denmark. The company's flagship product, Lego, consists of colorful interlocking plastic bricks and an accompanying array of gears, minifigures and various other parts...

 building toy sets introduced in 2007. Created in response to feedback and suggestions from the Adult Fans of Lego (AFOL) community, the sets in this series are generally intended for more advanced builders with most sets containing more than 2,000 total pieces and making use of unorthodox building techniques which have not been tried before in official Lego sets. In contrast to most Lego sets which are aimed at children and adolescents, the suggested age of most sets in the Modular Buildings series is 16 years or older. The Modular Buildings sets have been received with positive reviews, being considered by Lego designers and fans as "toys for adults". The sets include Market Street, Cafe Corner, Green Grocer, Fire Brigade, Grand Emporium, and the newest one, Pet Shop.

Overview

Each of the sets in the Modular Buildings series contains instructions to build a townhouse style building standing at least 2 stories high. The instructions often make use of advanced Lego construction techniques which appeal to experienced builders. They are built in modules where the roof and each floor can be lifted off to reveal the contents of the room or floor below. The Modular Buildings sets are built to minifigure
Minifigure
A Lego minifigure is a small plastic articulated figurine available as part of the construction toy Lego, produced by Danish toy manufacturer the Lego Group. They were first produced in 1978, and have become hugely successful, with over 3.7 billion produced, and the figure appearing in a variety...

 scale. Each of the sets in the series contains 3 or more minifigures as part of the set. The series has sometimes been referred to as the "modular building system" by Lego designers.

All sets in the series can also be joined together to form a larger "neighbourhood" layout of several buildings standing adjacent to each other. Connectors at the base of the models are aligned for easy connection with other models in the series.

History

In 2006, a poll was taken, aimed at the Adult Fans of Lego (AFOL) community. Adult fans were asked to share their ideas and opinions of what concept they would like to see for a future model from the Lego Group. Some of the ideas submitted were: more town and everyday buildings, structures with more architectural detail, realistic buildings, minifigure scale buildings, solid and enclosed buildings and more. These ideas were taken into consideration and a year later the first set in the Modular Buildings series, Café Corner, was released. A Lego fan was invited to provide feedback and suggestions during the design of that set.

Sets

To date, there have been six sets released in the series averaging about one new set each year.

Café Corner

Café Corner (set number: 10182) was the first of the Modular Buildings series. It was originally released in April 2007. The set contains 2056 pieces and is recommended for builders 16 years of age or older. Some of the set features include a 3 floor building set on a street corner, a vertical 'Hotel' sign, opening doors and windows, café tables and umbrellas, a striped awning and 3 minifigures. Many advanced building techniques were used such as: annexes, fanned ski shoes as decoration, a hotel sign using a SNOT technique (studs not on top), angled corner, and a 3D façade.

During development of this first set in the series there were a number of options considered by the designers based on cost before it was released. One version that would have cost more had additional café features, dark green interior walls, a bike and an additional minifigure. In contrast, a lower cost version of the set was considered which lacked rear exterior walls, had no interior stairs, had no extra interior walls on the second floor, no bike, and only 2 minifigures.

Lego fans had a hand in the final design of Café Corner by suggesting improvements to the initial prototypes such as adding color to the roof (which was originally gray) and translucent elements to the hotel sign.

Market Street

Market Street (set number: 10190) was the second of the Modular Buildings series. It was originally released as a follow up to Café Corner in 2007. The set contains 1248 pieces and is recommended for builders 10 years of age or older. Some of the set features include opening doors and windows, a gate, a striped awning, and 3 minifigures. Advanced construction techniques used in Market Street include: curved staircases, "stripped paint" sections on the walls, interchangeable floors, Dutch/Belgian stepped roof, a basement, offset windows, and wrought iron-look decoration and gate.

Market Street is a unique set in the Modular Buildings series in that it has fewer than 2000 pieces and is recommended for builders 10 years and up rather than the usual 16. One of the reasons this set was smaller than the others was to provide a lower cost entry point into the Modular Houses series.
Market Street is the only set in the series to be released with Lego Factory
Lego Factory
Lego Design by Me is a service connected with the construction toy Lego. Launched in 2005 under the name Lego Factory, the service allows people to design their own Lego models using a computer program, then upload them to the Lego website, design their own box design, and order them for actual...

branding on the box. This is because it was originally designed by a Lego fan rather than a Lego designer. Eric Brok, a Lego fan from the Netherlands, designed the set working closely with Lego designers.

Green Grocer

Green Grocer (set number: 10185) was the third of the Modular Buildings series. It was originally released in 2008. The set contains 2352 pieces and is recommended for builders 16 years of age or older. Some of the set features include a blue and white awning, opening doors and windows, detailed interiors to each room, a roof terrace, a fire escape, access to a courtyard behind the building, and 4 minifigures. Advanced building techniques used in Green Grocer include using black skeleton legs and hammers to make railings, using black spear guns as railings for the fire escape, using a paddle for a pendulum in a grandfather clock, and using hinges to make a bay window.

Green Grocer differs from the previous two sets in the series because it has a greater level of detail inside. Where Café Corner and Market Street had bare interiors, each floor in Green Grocer contains a prop such as a standup radiator or some furniture such as a grandfather clock. The first floor is fully furnished as a grocery, with refrigerated shelves with opening doors and cartons of food. The assortment of Lego food pieces in the grocery includes carrots, apples and bananas. There’s also a stairway to the apartment above, and a mailbox set with letters.

Fire Brigade

Released in September 2009, Fire Brigade (set number: 10197) is the fourth set in the Modular Buildings series. The set contains 2231 pieces and is recommended for builders 16 years of age or older. Modeled to look like a realistic 1930s fire station, the set includes a bell tower, an opening garage door, a '30s style fire truck, and 4 minifigures with a fire-dog. Like Green Grocer, all floors in the Fire Brigade set are fully furnished. The Fire Brigade is the first Modular House to come with a vehicle, the '30s style fire truck. The set also includes some new, unique pieces, such as gold fire helmets and a red sliding garage door.

New building techniques introduced with this set include a systematic way of building numbers. On the front of the building the year 1932 appears which is a reference to when Lego was founded. The number 3 also appears on the pavement of the set representing that this is the 3rd set in the series from Lego set designer Jamie Berard (he had previously designed Café Corner and Green Grocer).

Grand Emporium

Grand Emporium (set number: 10211) , released March 2010, is the fifth set in the Modular Buildings series. The set contains 2182 pieces and is recommended for builders 16 years of age or older. Modeled to look like a realistic early 20th Century department store, the set includes a realistic exterior with an ice cream stand, store window displays, window washer platform, and rooftop billboard. Interior details include an escalator, dressing rooms, and a wide assortment of "merchandise." There are 7 minifigures, including some that are made to look like mannequins.

Pet Shop

Pet Shop (set number: 10218) , released May 2011, is the sixth set in the Modular Buildings series. The set contains 2032 pieces and is recommended for builders 16 years of age or older. The first set in the series that is actually 2 buildings in one product (a town house and the pet shop itself). There are 4 minifigures, 2 parrots and fish tank with goldfish. Also includes 3 dog bones, ball, frog toy, birdhouse, bucket and brush. The set includes a full interior including a toilet, bed, kitchen and fireplace.

Challenges

A challenge faced by the designers of these sets is that they are not able to work with the full palette of Lego bricks and colors ever produced when designing. Instead they are limited to the bricks and colors currently in production by Lego at the time of the product design. As an example, for Café Corner, the designer wanted to include a bicycle piece in the set, but at the time, the machine that made bicycle pieces was broken. It had to be fixed in order for the designer to be able to include the piece in his design. With Market Street, the fan designer was limited to only the bricks and color combinations available as 'active components,' meaning bricks that were already in production. No new bricks could be introduced.

There have been scheduling challenges faced in the design of the Modular Houses sets. For the Green Grocer set, the designer believed that the set could have benefited from another design iteration before release. The detailed nature of these sets requires a greater amount of design time than a normal Lego set. It is expected that future sets in the series will not suffer from such schedule pressures.

During the design of Café Corner (and presumably with the other sets in the series), the designer had to work closely with the building instructions team due to some of the "unorthodox techniques" that he used "which have not been tried before in official Lego sets."

The reason interiors were not included in the first two models in the series, Café Corner and Market Street, was because they could not be seen in the pictures included on the packaging. Once the success of Modular Buildings sets had been proven with these first two sets, for the third set, Green Grocer, the designer was allowed to include interior details in each of the floors. As a result, many of the interior details of later sets, such Green Grocer, are not visible on the box and are only discovered while building the set.

Reception

The Modular Buildings series is viewed by Lego designers and fan sites as "toys for adults". Product reviews have been very positive with the biggest criticisms being price and degree of difficulty. With Café Corner, one reviewer complained that the interior of the building was bare of any finishing. This complaint was addressed in later models such as Green Grocer which had finished interior details included in each of its three floors.

When the first set in the series, Café Corner, was released, the designer indicated that more sets would follow in the series only if sales of the first set were successful. In a later interview in 2008 covering the third set in the series, Green Grocer, the designer indicated that sales had been strong enough to support four sets in the series so far (referring to the planned 2009 release of Fire Brigade as the fourth set).

External links

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