Once again, the record for the world's largest Lego tower has fallen. Last year, the Lego bricks towered 96 feet over Toronto. This year, in celebration of Lego's 50th anniversary, participants at Legoland in Windsor, UK built a tower resembling a Viking longboat mast that managed to hit the 100 foot mark using 500,000 bricks. Hitting the 100 foot mark is definitely a fitting way to celebrate the 50th anniversary—but I can't help but wonder how high they can go next year. [Metro and Daily Mail]
World's Tallest Lego Tower Reaches 100-Foot Mark
6:30 PM on Tue May 6 2008
By Sean Fallon
11,111 views
37 comments








Comments
Why???? Isn't this why God confused our languages? Crap like this shouldn't be built.
LEGO, Leg Godt, Play Well...
Well Played?
Cables? Are you using cables? There's no using cables in Lego tower building!
Not only cables but I think there is a pole inside too.
Did someone yell Jenga?
@GiltProto:
@GIZisGOD:
They totally cheated. This should be called "World's tallest guywire supported pole clad in Legos"
Using wires in lego tower building is like using steroids in baseball.
Aw man I was into it until I found out about the pole.
Guy wires I'd expect, but THAT!
I don't think so.
The 6 year old in me is freaking out!!!!!
That has gotta confuse a ground-dwelling creature's vanishing point!
I like the quilt-like patches on the side. Makes me think of what I could build with some neon LEGOs, hmmmm!
well, if you can use a pole, and guy wires - pretty much the sky's the limit isn't it?
I mean, really, how hard is it to build a tower with a pole in the middle, and support wires holding it up?
Could you see a record for the worlds tallest building with guy wires on it?
Plastic = Lego
Steel = Not Lego
@male roof blower (CFB): Why not surround a blimp in legos and say you built a lego blimp. Why not glue legos to your car and say you built a lego lambo. This is the most blatant case of false advertising I have heard since "The Never-Ending Story". Someone call Lionel Hutz, or if he's not available, Miguel Sanchez, and possibly Dr. Nguyen Van Falk as an expert witness.
Or or surround Gizmodo's editor for a Lego Lam!
I said, a Lego....is this thing on? Check twoo!
that shouldnt even count... whats the highest tower without metal in it?
Now I see a noble NASA goal: in zero g, a LEGO tower could very tall indeed.
We put a man on the moon, dammit!
I don't care how they did it. That much LEGO is orgasmic!
Reminds me of Kino no Tabi prequel:
[www.veoh.com]
@tidybowl: only because people who actually have something better to do, well, they'd give up and do something useful after a few minutes of plastic-quilting around a pole.
was the toronto lego tower free-standing, or did they guy-wire it too?
Get ready for the next extreme sport, Lego tower base jumping.
@strider_mt2k: * simultaneous groan and chuckle *
And how long have you been holding that one in, just aching for a Lego story, waiting patiently for the right moment? Lego Lam indeed. I guess we're just lucky one of the Giz folks isn't named after a frozen waffle.
@strider_mt2k: He's here all week folks! Try the veal!
They need to do a totally unsupported lego tower and see how high they can do it.
huh. i used to live in windsor and went to legoland when my brother was a little kid - must have been about twenty years ago now. cool to see it's still around and kicking.
Boss.
At some point, the weight of the legos above would crush the legos below. It will be interesting to see what that limit is.
@maven2k: Yeah, but when they finally do make a tower without a hidden support column, keep this clown away from it.
+ Watch video
@LindsayJoy: er, wow, someone's excited.
But what if they did it by killing pandas?
interesting.. the possibilities... the dreams...
a competition for highest unsupported tower...
then.. just maybe.. there could be a competition for lego bridge span - y'know like engineer school where you get judged on far you can span without central support, how much load it can carry, and how light the bridge structure is that did it..
then there could be a competition for biggest self-supporting dome by inside diameter..
then there could be a competition for making lego bob-sleds and then racing them...
then there could be a competition for lego dodgeball - no wait...
- - this sounds like the brazen call for Lego Olympics - to be held in Copenhagen on the anniversary of the date of the first lego set...
Gizmodo - sponsor it and make it so...
Using cables is cheating.
*
I like how in numerous places people obviously started getting creative, but then thought "aw, fuck it" halfway through and just went back to random blocks.
It's all about being safe. The guy wires are there to keep it from toppling over and the pole is for stability in the wind, I'm sure. I don't think you could even do something like this without SOME sort of safety measure in place.
haahaa-Nonsense ---> it can be done... no wires, poles or other 'safety' features....
-simply splay the base (y'know like a pyramid - fat at the bottom and narrower going up) so that you've got stability and lateral support.
-pour some type of mortar-goop (with high compressive strength) into each block to fill the air-holes so that the bottom blocks don't crush (but still won't glue them together - because that would be cheating)-- and there you go - we could build way-higher than 100-feet ---
though of course it would take more lego blocks than had ever been produced (because of the pyramid-type shape) - but hey - its a damn good cause.
@LindsayJoy: also the compressive stress those little bricks are taking at the bottom
AWESOME
I see where all our petroleum resources have gone...
@designguybrown: Can someone do the maths on this? There's a shitload of brick out there.
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