Sunday 6 March 2011

Asian Legoland in the works

Asian Legoland in the works

Builders are putting together 15,000 models for Legoland Malaysia, set to open in Johor Baru next year.

THE Taj Mahal is almost done, while Holy Light Church in Johor Baru and the Malaysian High Court have been completed.

But the biggest challenge may simply be carrying them out of the workshop.

At the Model Building Centre in Nusa Cemerlang Industrial Park at Nusajaya in Johor Baru, a team of 32 builders, the youngest of whom is 22, is labouring with some unusual materials – 30 million Lego bricks.

Inside the nondescript two-storey building, each builder sits at his or her workstation working on different models. The hum of machines is noticeably absent, as each model is painstakingly put together by hand.

Silver-coloured tubes hang overhead to suck in fumes from the glue used to put the bricks together. Different piles of bricks are laid out in nearby cartons.

The builders are working day and night to complete 15,000 Lego model structures for the RM720 million Legoland Malaysia, which is slated to open late next year.

Singaporeans will be able to get there via the Tuas Second Link, which is just a 15-minute drive from the park.

Other iconic Asian structures you can expect to see include the Petronas Twin Towers, the tallest twin buildings in the world.

The Taj Mahal alone required 42,500 bricks and 3,000 man-hours to assemble.

The 31ha attraction will be the sixth Legoland theme park in the world and the only one in Asia. The five parks had a combined attendance of more than 6.5 million visitors last year.

Lego is a line of construction toys first made in Denmark in the 1940s.

The Malaysian builders were selected from 1,000 participants in two competitions held in Malaysia in the last two years.

The first six successful candidates, termed pioneers, attended a 10-week training programme at Legoland California on the AtoZ of the process, from design and sketching to assembling.

One of them is supervisor Mohamed Firdaus, 26, who gave up a job as an engineering research assistant to join the Lego team.

“You learn something new every day. There is always another way to build,” he says. He has been a Lego model builder for one-and-a-half years.

The job sounds remarkably similar to constructing an actual building these days, using special software to generate a 3-D version of the structure and a Lego graph before the actual construction.

“It requires a lot of planning so that you don’t waste man-hours. You also need to take the number of bricks required and the weight into consideration, because they must be moved eventually,” says Mohamed.

Khairunnadia Kamarudin, 25, is another of the six pioneers and one of seven women in the team of builders.

“It was quite hard and tedious at first. But Lego models are now a medium for me to express my knowledge and patience,” says Khairunnadia, who studied industrial design at school in Malaysia.

Legoland Malaysia is one of many projects in the Iskandar development region (now known as Iskandar Malaysia), which the Malaysian Government wants to build as an economic, leisure and residential hub.

Legoland will be the centrepiece of Medini Lifestyle, a lifestyle and entertainment hub.

Catering to families with children between the ages of two and 12, the park will feature more than 40 rides and attractions.

While prices have not been set, developers say they will be competitive.

The likes of Universal Studios Singapore charges S$66 (RM158) for a one-day adult pass on weekdays, while Hong Kong Disneyland charges about HKD$57 (RM136).

Siegfried Borst, senior director of operations for the park, is counting on the “universal appeal” of Lego to draw visitors.

“Our target market is children aged two to 12, and fortunately, there are many more children being born every year,” he says. – The Sunday Times/ANN

-News courtesy of The Star-

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