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Lego Secret Vault Contains All Sets In History

An anonymous reader writes "Gizmodo has an exclusive video and feature of one of the most heavily guarded secrets in Lego: the security vault where they store all the Lego sets ever created, new in their boxes. 4,720 sets from 1953 to 2008. Really amazing stuff and a trip down memory lane to every person who has played with the magic bricks. All combined, the collection must be worth millions, not only because of the collector value, but also because Lego uses it as a safeguard in copyright and patent cases."

27 of 266 comments (clear)

  1. Bonus points if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They would have totally gotten bonus points in my book if the vault and locking mechanism were actually made of Legos. It's totally doable (people have made far bigger things out of Legos), but probably insecure if you can just cut through the Legos with a Sawz-All. Still, it would have been nice if they'd made it LOOK like it were made of Legos. The Lego signs are a nice touch along those lines.

  2. The space sets were the best by pudding7 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Oh man, the Galaxy Explorer was the best! Seems like after the space sets, all the pieces started getting to specialized. Giant plates that could hardly be used to make anything other than what the instructions said.

    I remember having dozens of little bins full of the hinge pieces, light bulb looking things, and space man helmets.

    Good times.

    1. Re:The space sets were the best by Splab · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well from playing Civilization I learned that in fact its very possible for a phalanx to fight off a aircraft carrier and several tanks. I fail to see the problem with a knight killing an astronaut.

  3. God damnit by sunami88 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now I have to go change my pants. Thanks Slashdot.

    --
    Sex. Drugs, and Unix.
  4. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by __aamnbm3774 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I heard Microsoft burned every copy of Windows-ME. Along with all their source-code. That way, they are committed to using the same binaries forever.

  5. Re:Additional Photo Of Vault and Facility... by eastlight_jim · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not to mention highly confusing once inside and ringed by a darstadly innescapable staircase that's been baffling would-be thieves for many a year.

  6. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by Speare · · Score: 5, Informative

    One would think this is the case, but many companies fail this. It takes an archivists' mindset to institute this as policy in the early days of a small company.

    In fact I know that Microsoft was pretty bad about this in years past. Even though storage is cheap, they have had to ask employees for old products like MS-DOS 1.1 or MS-DOS 2.0 floppies from time to time, as the official archivists were unable to produce the "silvers" (copies from their golden masters sent to reproduction) or in fact any boxed copies at all.

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    [ .sig file not found ]
  7. Legos by Dave+Tucker+Online · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That was fun to watch.

    I never followed any of the Lego instructions, though. So while I owned many of those sets, I never built any of those things.

    Was there anybody else who would just dump open the packages, mix it in with all your other pieces, and build random crap...like flying boats that deploy ninjas?

    1. Re:Legos by pomegranatesix · · Score: 5, Funny

      Funny. My flying lego boats deployed pirates. I think we may have to have a throwdown.

  8. My favorite Lego kit.... by joeytmann · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By far, the Auto Chassis. Rack and pinion steering, v-4 motor with moving pistons, 3-speed gear box, fully independent front and rear suspension, oh and adjustable seats. Was an awesome kit to put together.

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    Insert funny smart-ass comment here.
  9. Re:Storage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's called compact shelving. Libraries have been using it for decades.

  10. Lego Colorado by smellsofbikes · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I was a kid, LEGO decided to license out their manufacture to a Samsonite factory in Loveland, Colorado (right next door to the Hewlett Packard facility that was the first place HP had outsourced from its birth in Silicon Valley, as it happens.) The factory also made luggage and kids' bikes. It was cool because up until 2006 it still looked like it had been made of LEGO bricks: the windows were 2x4 clear bricks on-end, 12 feet high. They made all sorts of weird LEGO stuff, and I wonder sometimes if it was all official -- the injection molding dies came straight from Denmark, and were very, very carefully accounted for, but the plant also built other unusual LEGO sets like big crude-looking gears that only sort of meshed with the standard LEGO bricks.
    My childhood was filled with disappointment because no matter how many LEGO kits I managed to get, some of my friends, whose parents worked at the plant, had trash-bags full of floor sweepings and could make playhouses we could crawl into with their bricks. (Including a lot of weird off-colors and bricks that weren't shaped quite right.) The local library had, and probably still has, several LEGO buildings the size of cars, beautifully designed and put together. I was upset that they were glued together, making all those parts worthless. Okay, I'm still upset by that.
    Anyway. I've just always wondered if the rumors were true and the little Colorado plant did create some graymarket LEGO kits that Billund doesn't have. LEGO yanked their license after only a few years because they were doing a poor job, but maybe, just maybe, I have a couple LEGO pieces that aren't represented in that vault in Billund.

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    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  11. Building instructions from 1958 to 2007 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Building instructions from 1958 to 2007 on this site:
    http://www.hccamsterdam.nl/brickfactory/year/index.htm

  12. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by Amouth · · Score: 5

    that is why i use underrated

    --
    '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
  13. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by spun · · Score: 5, Informative

    No karma for underrated, either, because there is no meta-moderation on under and overrated.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  14. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by Mikkeles · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't think they had patents. They tried using Trade Mark infringement law to prevent competition, but lost in Canada.

    --
    Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
  15. Re:IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My first year teacher at mathematics (Soren Eilers at University of Copenhagen) has put a lot of work into the counting problem of combining six two-by-four Lego blocks. It's a huge problem to figure out how many ways you can combine six of those, and he describes how he with mathematics and programming methods approaches this problem at http://www.math.ku.dk/~eilers/lego.html.

    Lego themselves computed in 1974 that the ways you can combine those six blocks is 102,981,500 - and that number has been referenced ever since in different media - and it's wrong.

    Now, if you want to compute the total number of possibilities, bear in mind what Soren Eilers writes on his site:

    the mathematics of the total number of combinations is so irregular that it is very difficult to come up with a formula for it. Thus one has to essentially go through all the possibilities. Based on our data, we estimate the total number of ways to combine 25 two-by-four LEGO bricks to be a 47 digit number.

    With the current efficiency of our computer programs we further estimate that it would take us something like

    130,881,177,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

    years to compute the correct number. After some 5,000,000,000 years we will have to move our computer out of the Solar system, as the Sun is expected to become a red giant at about that time.

  16. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by Mikkeles · · Score: 5, Informative

    Whoops! I'm WRONG. They did have patents which expired in Canada in 1988. The Trade Mark dispute they did lose, however.

    (Goes and beats himself with fanfold paper).

    --
    Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
  17. You would think that but this is not the rule... by gmezero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What Lego has here is more the exception to the rule.

    And on a separate note, am I the only one here horrified to see these people handling these boxes with their bare hands. For crying out loud, I hope they at least made that guy wash his hands first before letting him finger everything up.

    Sheesh.

  18. Re:Storage by roguetrick · · Score: 5, Interesting
    --
    -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
  19. Tearing Up. by thesolo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For Christmas in 1990, my dad bought me the Legoland pirate ship (#6285), as shown in the video, and a few other pirate sets. I put them together immediately and played with them for hours on end.

    My dad died suddenly in early 1991. Those lego sets were the last thing he ever gave me.

    Seeing that original box on the video made me feel 10 years old all over again. Thanks Gizmodo & Slashdot.

  20. Re:This journalist is so emo by jamrock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here he is in this vault of cool stuff, and all he can talk about his his "feelings" and how life is all so hard. Remember journalists! The first rule of journalism is "Nobody cares about you and your life. If you are really lucky, they might just be interested in your subject, but they certainly aren't interested in you!"
    Are you disappointed that he didn't just present an illustrated list of all 4,720 sets? This wasn't scientific reporting, or a dry treatise on new mathematical discoveries, and even then the very best journalists do include a subjective element in order for other humans to connect to the story. The journalist was attempting to express how the tour took him back to his childhood, and judging from many of the comments here, he succeeded in evoking the same feeling in others. The best journalism has a human reference, and strikes a fine balance between being too removed and being too involved. Maybe he strayed too far over the line, but it's not true that the journalist's feelings about a subject don't matter or are unimportant to the story.
  21. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Funny

    Given Microsoft's history on security, if they *did* have a vault, I'd guess it would be made from Lego.

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    I hate printers.
  22. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I heard Microsoft burned every copy of Windows-ME. Just like all their customers.
  23. Patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, even though LEGO famously patented the basic stud-and-tube brick design decades ago, the company has filed for numerous patents since then on all sorts of things.

    You can view them on Google's Patent Search. Many are filed by INTERLEGO AG of Switzerland.

    http://www.google.com/patents?q=interlego&btnG=Search+Patents

    Among other things, LEGO has patented the track and car designs from its monorail system, a "brick vacuum" for picking up bricks, and a linear actuator system that is going to be used in the 2008 LEGO Technic sets released this fall.

  24. Re:You would think that but this is not the rule.. by One+Childish+N00b · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To a collector, the collection is the fun, and the fond memories are inside those mint-condition original boxes. That row of original Star Wars figurines in their pristine presentation boxes are a point of pride and a symbol of an achievement.

    I'm with you on this one, and I smashed the shit out of a lot of what would probably have been very valuable collector's items in my youth, all in the name of fun, but I do understand the collectors' mindset.

    --
    Dealing with lawyers would be a lot less tedious if they all looked like Casey Novak.
  25. Re:cool tour, but no real surprise by spun · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, he means that mod points are fattening.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton