BUDAPEST (AFP) – To build his giant Lego structures which usually take hundreds of thousands of bricks, Hungarian artist Balazs Doczy first must solve major “engineering challenges”.
“Every structure has an Achilles’ heel. Once it is solved, the rest of the work is easy,” the 48-year-old told AFP.
He needed 90 helpers for one of his most recent works – a life-sized Lego tram made up of a staggering 1.8 million pieces.
Together they put in around 6,800 hours to assemble Doczy’s most ambitious project that is now on display in a bustling square in central Budapest.
The 11-metre-long Lego tram – commissioned by Budapest’s transport companies and its tourist office to “public transport and creativity” – has attracted droves.
“We’ve never seen anything like this before,” said Malaysian tourist Lucas Chang, 32, while dance coach Barbara Rajnai said children in her son’s and daughter’s kindergarten told them to check it out.
A professional Lego artist for more than 10 years, Doczy works more like an architect than a builder, relying on specialist software to draw up plans and only assembling bricks when he needs to test out a particular design.
“Initially, I do preliminary sketches much like a painter, stacking bricks on each other in a digital environment,” he said. “I set up the scale, identifying recognisable elements and proportioning the other parts relative to that.”
For his intricate dioramas, such as his model of the Heroes’ Square in Budapest, every piece has to imitate a specific detail.
In “megastructures” such as the tram, imperfections even as small as a tenth of a millimetre could stack up, leading to instability, he said.
“I always compare it to quantum mechanics and gravity: in a smaller scope matter behaves differently than on a grander scale,” he said.
Thus blocks are glued together, an internal frame is added for extra support, and experts are consulted to ensure structural integrity.
Doczy also added some baseplates on its sides to allow people to place their own Lego bricks, which “has always appealed to me, because it allows anyone to express their creativity and transform the sculpture into a community piece”.