Someone Finally Built the Hollywood Sign Out of LEGO and It Actually Slaps

Every year, roughly ten million tourists visit Los Angeles specifically to photograph a sign they will never get closer than a few hundred meters to. There are no public trails to the Hollywood Sign’s base. The entire surrounding area is fenced, monitored, and actively defended against the kinds of people who once scaled those letters for a prank or a protest or a particularly committed selfie (remember the Hollyweed prank from 2017?) It is, by design, a landmark you admire from a distance. Which makes a LEGO version of it feel surprisingly appropriate.

Builder imaxedlp has rendered the sign and its Mount Lee surroundings in 496 pieces, and the result is genuinely charming. The build captures the hillside as a full landscape: tiered sandy slopes, clusters of miniature palms, a clapperboard lying open mid-scene, a vintage camera set up as if waiting for action. The broadcast tower rising behind the letters is an accurate detail that most people probably forget exists. All of it lands on a compact diorama footprint that earns its shelf space.

Designer: imaxedlp

The terraced hillside, built up in warm tan with angled slope bricks stepping from the base to the letter line, gives the model genuine topographic depth from every viewing angle. The nine letters are rendered in light gray with visible stud detailing and subtle column supports underneath, closely echoing the real sign’s steel-frame mounting system. A couple lean at a slight angle, mirroring how the actual letters sit unevenly on the hillside. The clapperboard lying open on the slope, mid-scene, as if a crew just called cut and walked away, is my favorite detail. Small, but it does a lot of narrative work.

The vintage film camera on the right flank, built from dark gray cylindrical pieces with a twin-lens silhouette, grounds the whole scene in old Hollywood specifically. The popcorn bucket on the left pulls in the audience side of the equation. The broadcast antenna tower rising above the D at the far right is the detail that will genuinely surprise people who have only ever seen the sign in photographs cropped to exclude everything but the letters.

imaxedlp’s Hollywood Sign is currently sitting just under 1,000 supporters on LEGO Ideas, where fan-designed builds need 10,000 votes to trigger an official LEGO review for potential production as a retail set. You can head to the LEGO Ideas page here and cast your vote.

The post Someone Finally Built the Hollywood Sign Out of LEGO and It Actually Slaps first appeared on Yanko Design.

This Hollywood Hills House Channels Medieval Castles with a Modern Industrial Twist

Perched atop a challenging 45-percent slope in the Hollywood Hills, this striking residence by Kristen Becker of Mutuus Studio reimagines what luxury living can look like within a modest footprint. Completed in 2016, the house was commissioned by an actor-director couple who wanted their Los Angeles home to feel as intimate and carefully curated as their New York City penthouse loft. The steep, oak-dotted hillside presented serious design challenges, but Becker transformed these constraints into architectural opportunities that give the home its distinctive character.

Becker drew inspiration from the clients’ travels through Ireland and their fascination with European castles, creating a sequence of spaces that unfold with theatrical drama. Visitors enter through a wooden, steel, and concrete bridge that spans a secret garden before arriving at an imposing bronze door. The garden connects to a courtyard where sunlight filters through floor-to-ceiling windows into the bathroom below, evoking the atmospheric quality of ancient fortresses. Medieval castles and industrial buildings both influenced the aesthetic, resulting in a design that feels simultaneously raw and refined.

Designer: Kristen Becker of Mutuus Studio

The multi-storey structure steps down the hillside rather than fighting against it, allowing each level to capture different views of the surrounding landscape dotted with shrubs, cacti, and mature oak trees. Natural light floods the interiors through expansive glazing, while a garage-style door in the main living area lifts upward to dissolve the boundary between inside and out. This connection to the terrace extends the living space and takes full advantage of California’s temperate climate. The steel and concrete structure provides the industrial backbone that supports the home’s open, flowing layout.

Interior design played an equally important role in the project, with Becker collaborating closely with the clients on furnishings that reflect their globetrotting lifestyle and eclectic taste. The living room showcases caramel leather sofas alongside leopard-print stools and a bronze and glass coffee table by Willy Daro. African artwork hangs near pieces from Brian Henson’s childhood collection. The dining area features a Finn Juhl teak table surrounded by Peter Moos chairs, all illuminated by a custom Facaro bicycle chain chandelier that adds unexpected whimsy.

Throughout the home, vintage pieces from different eras and continents sit comfortably together. Ricardo Fasanello’s Anel chair shares space with Bruno Mathsson’s Pernilla Lounge Chair, antique Chinese sideboards, vintage Japanese benches, and a Norman Cherner swivel chair from the 1960s. An Arc dome pendant by Allied Maker illuminates a vintage Warren Bacon saddle stool. Every element received thoughtful consideration, with the design team and owners collaborating to ensure each piece contributed to a seamless experience of place.

The Hollywood Hills House stands as proof that luxury and modesty can coexist. Becker’s background in dance informed the seamless flow through the rooms, where movement feels intuitive and natural. The residence delivers a sophisticated California lifestyle while maintaining efficiency in both space and resources. Photography by Kevin Scott captures how this modern castle commands its hilltop position, offering a fresh interpretation of the iconic Case Study Houses while establishing its own contemporary presence in the Los Angeles architectural landscape.

The post This Hollywood Hills House Channels Medieval Castles with a Modern Industrial Twist first appeared on Yanko Design.

The Iconic Interstellar ‘Miller’s Planet Scene’ gets its own Adorable LEGO Brick Recreation

“Cooper! This is no time for caution.”

As the Ranger Ship descended on Miller’s Planet, hope suddenly turned to dismay and then to horror as Joseph Cooper and Dr. Brand realized that not only was the planet unviable for human life, their crew member was dead, they had wasted 23 years simply in the minutes they spent on the planet’s surface, and they were just mere moments away from a killer tidal wave approaching them from the horizon. The scene from blockbuster space-thriller Interstellar is noteworthy for causing a wide range of emotions and creating a visual tension only director Christopher Nolan can conjure. Now, LEGO builder Minibrick Productions is paying tribute to the Miller’s Planet scene with their tiny LEGO-based recreation that features the ranger aircraft, astronauts Cooper and Brand, and the shapeshifting robots TARS and CASE.

Designer: Minibrick Productions

Miller’s Planet is the first of the 3 planets explored by the group of astronauts looking for a viable alternative to earth. While crew-member Romilly stays back on the main ship, Cooper and Brand (played by Michael McConaughey and Anne Hathaway) travel to the planet, located close to a black hole. Little did they know that not only would this visit be futile, it would cost them decades because of the planet’s proximity to the black hole, causing a warp in space-time. Minibrick Productions’ rendition of this scene is as accurate as it gets, with all the characters and a rather realistic-looking Ranger spacecraft to match. McConaughey and Hathaway come outfitted in their space suits, while TARS and CASE, two monolithic-looking robots sport repositionable arms that allow them to walk like a human.

The Ranger craft itself is more than just aesthetic. Pop its hood off and there’s an entire cockpit where Cooper and Brand fit right in, along with a crawl-space where TARS or CASE can dock themselves. The rear hatch on the craft can open and close too, revealing the ramp through which the astronauts enter and exit the craft.

“This set would be mindless fun to a child who dreams of exploring space, as well as any collector who wishes to display one of the most iconic vehicles from science fiction,” says Minibrick Productions, the creator behind this LEGO scene. The LEGO Miller’s Planet scene from Interstellar comprises just 532 bricks, making it a relatively simple build for kids and enthusiasts alike. It currently sits in LEGO’s Ideas forum with over 4000 votes from the community. If it reaches the 10,000 mark, LEGO’s internal team will review it before turning it from a fan-made submission into a box-set that anyone can buy. Click here to vote for this build!

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