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SOM’s Burj Khalifa immortalised in Lego

SOM’s Burj Khalifa immortalised in Lego

Dubai’s Burj Khalifa has become the latest building available via the Lego Architecture series. The Skidmore, Owings & Merrill-designed tower, officially the world’s tallest building, has been reproduced in Lego bricks by Adam Reed Tucker.

Emaar Properties and the LEGO Group to launch Burj Khalifa Architecture Series model

Emaar Properties and the LEGO Group to launch Burj Khalifa Architecture Series model

Emaar Properties has joined hands with the LEGO Group to unveil the Architecture Series model of Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building. The unveiling celebrates the launch of the Burj Khalifa as a set in the LEGO Architecture series.

Buildings, from far left to far right: Fallingwater by Frank Lloyd Wright, Trump Tower Chicago, Burj Khalifa, Shanghai's Jin Mao Tower, Empire State Building. Photos: Courtesy of Adam Reed Tucker

The LEGO Architect’s Towering Ambition

The mastermind behind the LEGO Architecture: Towering Ambition exhibit is Adam Reed Tucker, a trained architect and longtime LEGO enthusiast. He began experimenting with LEGOs as a medium for his art back in 2003, and the result is nothing short of spectacular: 15 famous buildings made entirely from LEGO bricks.

You can see 15 models of famous buildings around the world in the "Lego Architecture: Towering Ambition" exhibit at the National Building Museum. (Marvin Joseph/the Washington Post)

See Lego models of famous buildings at National Building Museum

The 38-year-old artist and architect was in Washington recently to help set up an exhibition of his work at the National Building Museum. Called “Lego Architecture: Towering Ambition,” the show features 15 miniature models of some of the world’s most famous buildings, built entirely out of Lego pieces. Did I say miniature? One of the works in the show is almost 18 feet tall and made from 450,300 Lego pieces. It’s a copy of the Burj Khalifa, a brand-new skyscraper in Dubai that, at 2,717 feet, holds the record as the tallest building in the world.

Adam Reed Tucker's models of skyscrapers reveal the still-potent power of the simplest Lego elements.

Review: ‘Lego Architecture: Towering Ambition’ at the National Building Museum

In a sunny gallery on the second floor of the museum, compelling large-scale reproductions of the Empire State Building, the Sears Tower (the Chicago landmark now known as the Willis Tower) and the current highest building in the world, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, stand next to one another, as if relocated to form an ideal city of overachieving architecture. The Burj Khalifa model, which took 340 hours to build, is 17 1/2 feet high and incorporates 450,300 bricks.