The Lego Bridge stands over three metres tall and spans 31 metres. The structure weighs 750 kg and is made up of more than 200,000 individual plastic bricks.
It was designed and built by Duncan Titmarsh, the UK’s only certified Lego professional, and his company Bright Bricks. Engineering design input was provided by Aecom bridge engineer Robin Sham.
It took the Bright Bricks team a total of 650 hours to construct the bridge. It was a mixture of offsite and onsite construction. The bridge was first assembled, and the world record broken, at Weydon School’s sports hall in Farnham, Surrey.
The structure is now at the centre of a new Bridge Engineering exhibition at the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) in Great George Street, London, which is open until April 2017.
The exhibition guides visitors on a tour of structures through the years from Thomas Telford’s Menai Strait suspension bridge, to the Severn Bridge and Scotland’s Queensferry Crossing. An interactive zone allows visitors and children to become civil engineers for the day by constructing their own bridges.
Robin Sham said: ‘Bridges connect people and places, both physically and emotionally. The ICE’s visionary Lego Bridge project connects civil engineers with the public, demonstrating the monumental accomplishments of civil engineering. Using familiar Lego bricks to demystify and showcase the extraordinary feats of engineers, I hope the next generation will be inspired to consider engineering as a career.’