First-of-its-kind Lego event in Halifax draws hundreds of people - Action News
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Nova Scotia

First-of-its-kind Lego event in Halifax draws hundreds of people

Hundreds of people showed up for Halifaxs first Bricksplosion. The event was organized by the Maritime Lego User Group for fans of the iconic toy. More than 30 builders displayed their work at the Mayflower Curling Club on Saturday.

Bricksplosion showcases all types of Lego creations by local artists

A woman and her child look closely at some fo the Lego work.
Hundreds of people showed up for the first ever Bricksplosion Lego event in Halifax on Saturday. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

If you build it, they will come.

Hundreds of people showed up Saturday for Halifax's first Bricksplosion.

The event was organized by the Maritime Lego User Group for fans of the iconic toy. More than 30 builders displayed their work at the Mayflower Curling Club.

"I'm blown away," said the group's Shawn McLeod. "It's been packed since the minute the door opened."

Shawn sits beside of Lego self-portrait.
Shawn McLeod says he was 'blown away' by the response to the first event of its kind in Halifax. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

A hundred tables were set up with a variety of creations such as landmarks, Star Wars spaceships and original designs.

There are a lot of exciting artists using Lego in the region, McLeod said.

One of the Lego builders stands in front of his work while speaking to visitors of the event.
Organizers say more than 30 builders took part in the inaugural event. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)
Zachary sits beside his pieces that will be displayed at Lego headquarters.
Zachary Steinman has been invited to Lego headquarters in Denmark to display six of his pieces. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

Zachary Steinman's work has caught the attention of the Lego company, which has invited him to its headquarters in Denmark next month to showcase six of his pieces.

"It feels amazing," said Steinman, who is from Halifax. "At first, I thought it was a joke."

Steinman saidhe loved Lego as a kid and began playing with it again during the pandemic. He saidhe tries to make things that don't look like Lego.

"Many times I'll just be playing with parts and they speak to me and I'll see something," he said.

Some of the displays are made up of thousands of pieces and take significant time just to set up.

A town made up of Lego
Owen Grace, who made 'City by the Sea,' says each building consists of roughly 3,000 pieces of Lego. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)
Owen holds a lego van thats in street of his lego city he made.
Grace displayed "City by the Sea" at the Bricksplosion event in Halifax. The work is made up of thousands of Lego pieces. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

Owen Grace needed several tables for his "City By The Sea."

"It takes me about five hours to set up the display once I'm here because all the buildings are like their own Lego blocks," he said.

Grace saidhe was surprised by the turnout to the event, but he's not surprised that Lego remains so popular.

It's because the pieces he got when he was kid can be used with pieces that can be bought in a store today, he said.

"It's just a matter of your imagination and how you're going to put it together."