This model of Philadelphia's Ben Franklin Bridge was built on the waterfront under the real bridge. It was built over the course of two hours on CN8's live morning show "Your Morning on CN8" with Nicole Fox.
About this creation
In July 2004, I was contacted by Nicole Fox, one of the hosts of "Your Morning on CN8", a live morning show that reaches 6.2 million homes in the Northeastern U.S. She thought it would be fun to feature me on her show.
Since the show is based out of Philadelphia, we decided it would be fun to build a local "Philly" model. And since I am passionate about architecture, we decided to build a model of the Ben Franklin Bridge, at Penns Landing underneath the actual bridge.
The show aired on Monday September 27, 2004, between 9 am and 11 am.

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We arrived around 7:30 am to set up. I had flown out with about 10,000 loose LEGO pieces as luggage, and the folks at Penns Landing supplied some long tables for me to build on.
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Situated at the base of the bridge, I spread out my LEGO pieces and prepared for a crazy morning of building.
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As we went live, Nicole explained the challenge to the audience, I talked a bit about what we were going to do...
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... and then we started building! Nicole started by piecing together four of the 4-foot-long suspension cables, and I worked on the main stanchions. We cut away after a few minutes and continued building off-camera while other features ran on the show.
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In order to get the bridge done in time, my fiancee Lily and I pre-built some small 4-piece and 8-piece stacks of bricks. It's a good thing we did, because we ended up finishing just in time! I spent 2 days before the show researching the architecture of the bridge, building prototypes, and aquiring LEGO elements.
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Nicole and our photogrpaher, Shannon, both thouroughly enjoyed the hours of building.
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Every half hour or so, we would do another live hit, to show the viewers our progress. You can't see in this photo, but by this point, much of the right half of the bridge was complete. (And it's such a shame that much of the real bridge was covered in that white scaffolding!) :(
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Coming along nicely... I've almost finished the second stanchion, and Nicole is adding some of the stacks of 1x2 bricks. Each of the large grey baseplate was lined with 200 1x2 bricks, totalling 2000 for the entire bridge.
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Nicole finished up the suspension cables, which were made by lining up hundreds of 1x2 bricks. I showed her how they act like little hinges and "flex".
After having worked with 1x2 bricks for so long, her fingers were hurting! I guess I must be callussed. :) So we switched her over to 2x4 bricks, working on large parts of the superstructure, which she liked much better. :)
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By our second-to-last live hit, you can see that much of the bridge is done. Over half of it is already raised onto the superstructure, which was just a simple, loosly balanced grid of "beams" built out of 2x4 bricks. I was very fortunate that it was not windy, because the model relied on a lot of simple balancing!
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Here I am putting some final details on the top of one of the stanchions. We'd already attached the suspension cables at this point, and I thought it would be fun to add some airplane lights and radio antennaes.
This close-up footage of me building was later run on the CN8 daily news.
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The bridge is DONE! Wow! By this point, the show was 2 minutes from ending, and we had JUST finished! (You can see I'm still adding some finishing touches, like highway road signs.)
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OK, some background -- my fiancee Lily and my friend Steve both came to help out during the show. Nicole was chatting with Steve off camera when he mentioned that he just recieved a LEGO "Save the date" wedding postcard from Lily and I. The cards featured 1:20 scale LEGO models of myself and of Lily.
When we were next on-air, Nicole pulled out the "Save the date" card and they zoomed in on it on live TV... "Look, it's Sean and Lily as LEGO people! Save the date everyone!" :)
Now I just hope I don't get an extra 85,000 guests... :)
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Here we are, with the completed bridge, looking back onto the real Ben Franklin Bridge. My main goal on this project was to get a reasonable recognizable impression of the bridge, rather than a literal duplication. My model is, of course, not to scale -- at the height we made it, it would have been over 50 feet long. You'll also notice that I only reproduced two of the three "X" shapes in the main stanchions.
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After the show ended, Nicole and I posed for a picture with the bridge. Final piece count was about 7000 pieces (estimtated). It was about 3 feet tall and 12.5 feet long.
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Here I am, with the real Ben Franklin Bridge growing out of my head. :)
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Steve (right) is a friend of mine from grade school who happened to recently start working in Philly. He came by and helped build a lot of the roadway areas off-camera ... and it's a good thing too! Nicole, my fiancee Lily, and I would have never finished in time otherwise!
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If I had more time, I would have liked to have built more cars and added roadway lanes and a concrete divider down the center. The real Ben Franklin Bridge also has a set of train tracks running on the outer edges, but it didn't seem feasable to add them in with the amount of time we had.
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Here is one last picture of the model before we dismantled it. We kept most of it in large "chunks" so that I could reassemble it when I got home... but on our way out of Philadelphia, we were rear-ended in our rental car and the model (which was in the trunk) was completely destroyed. (We were OK, it was only a fender-bender, but it wasn't anything an unglued LEGO model could have survived!) I guess it will only live in our memories from now on.
All in all, I had a wonderful time working with Nicole and Shannon from CN8. We all had a great time, the folks from Penns Landing were really nice to us (and even stayed to watch most of the building!) I was really concerned that we wouldn't be able to "pull it off", but everything went according to plan!
I hope to get a video copy of the show (I haven't even seen it yet) so maybe I can post some video clips at some point in the near future.
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Comments
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I like it |
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A Warrior of Cerinia . April 2, 2010 |
Sorry to hear that Mr. President. And how much blue do you have sir? Like a ton? And do you even have light blue? |
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I like it |
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April 2, 2010 |
Awesome!! I can't believe you finished two minutes before the two hour limit! That's some really good luck! |
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I made it |
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April 2, 2010 |
Quoting Jack Bacchus
I bet the fun part was smashing it up =P
I would Get a sledge hammer and Go BANG BANG BANG!
Actually, we put it in the trunk of our rental car and were rear-ended at a stoplight by a big SUV just a few minutes later. There were blue LEGO bricks all over the street! (Seriously.) |
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| Jack Bacchus February 5, 2010 |
I bet the fun part was smashing it up =P
I would Get a sledge hammer and Go BANG BANG BANG! |
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I like it |
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October 15, 2008 |
Well... it will live in our memories forever too. I think... =)
~Martin |
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I like it |
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Ian Minchin May 18, 2008 |
Shut up joel this things awsome |
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I like it |
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April 19, 2007 |
Awesome!
P.s.: Bob flux's unipod creations show some real promise for a new lego franchise, please check them out! |
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I like it |
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June 9, 2006 |
i think it is very good and has alot of time and effort put into it. |
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I like it |
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January 25, 2006 |
How were the suspension cables made? Oh well, good job! |
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I like it |
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October 3, 2004 |
Well done again Sean! This creation is excellent especially under the added preasure of Live Television. All the best to you and Lily. |
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I like it |
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September 30, 2004 |
Fantastic job in such a Unique situation! most of us take loads of time building with only a few bricks... Thats about all I can say. And getting featured on LIVE TV!!! Wow, guess you'd better get some extra seats for your wedding :-) |
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I like it |
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September 30, 2004 |
That is amazing, esecially with the pressure of finishing on live T.V! I generally take two hours to build a relatively small lego, let alone something that big. Just curious. How long did it take to design? |
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