Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Professional Lego Builder 'Hasn't Worn A Tie For Years' After Giving Up It Job

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2020 09:32 PM

    VANCOUVER - Many years ago when Ryan McNaught was an IT professional, he got an email from his manager who wanted to have a meeting about the number of meetings they were having.

     

    "I knew right then that I wanted to do something different," McNaught said in an interview Wednesday.

     

    Around that time McNaught met people who worked for Lego and began to collaborate on a few projects. The company had recently started its certified professional program and they suggested he put together a business proposal and apply to it.

     

    A little over a decade ago he became a Lego certified professional and is one of only 14 in the world.

     

    Over the past few days—, McNaught and a team of Lego builders moved into the Telus World of Science in Vancouver where they have made 20 models of skyscrapers from Canada, the United States, Australia, Asia and the United Arab Emirates. The structures include the Wilshire Grand Center in Los Angeles, Chicago's Willis Tower, the Shanghai Tower and the Burj Khalifa from Dubai.

     

    The group used more than 500,000 Lego bricks and took over 2,400 hours to build the structures featured in the Towers of Tomorrow exhibition, which begins Friday.

     

    All the buildings are on a scale of 1:200, McNaught said.

     

    "This allows you to compare from buildings around the world," he added. So a person can sit the Empire State Building next to the CN Tower and compare the two for size and shape, he said.

     

    Of the buildings featured at the exhibition, McNaught said the Shanghai Tower was the hardest to build.

     

    "It's shaped like a guitar pick or a rounded triangle, which twists as it goes up so it was really difficult to build out of Lego bricks."

     

    It is those limitations with Lego that make it appeal to McNaught's "nerdy tech brain," he said.

     

    His favourite subjects in school were math and computer science, he said, and building a Lego model is "like being a real architect just with Lego bricks."

     

    McNaught and his team do research, look at photos, video and even satellite images of the buildings they are going to make.

     

    "Then we do a paper sketch — pen and paper — work out the calculations ... a lot of math is involved. Then we start building from there."

     

    His first Lego set was a blue boat given to him when he was three years old by his grandma Hazel.

     

    McNaught said the one thing that has remained constant from the time he started playing with Lego are the bricks, which haven't changed at all. His favourite brick is the two by four — two studs wide by four studs long, he said.

     

    "It's a very plain brick but we use a lot of them."

     

    McNaught said he's "very fortunate" to be doing what he does because it's an "aspirational career."

     

    "I was in senior IT management. I would put on a suit and go to work, very different day compared to now," he said.

     

    "I haven't worn a tie for years."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment
    In a video released yesterday, the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the Customs and Immigration Union (PSAC-CIU) outline several cases which have gone unaddressed by CBSA.

    Border Workers' Union Says 'Two-Tier System' At CBSA Creates Toxic Environment

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis
    Vancouver City Council has approved a series of recommendations that will enable rental apartments to be developed faster, and in more areas of the city. 

    Vancouver Approves New Rental Housing Policy Amid City’s Housing Crisis

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax Increasing By 25%

    The City of Vancouver will be raising its empty homes tax by 25 per cent for each of the next three years in an effort to tackle a crisis in the lack of long-term rental housing.    

    Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax Increasing By 25%

    Numerous Fatalities' After Small Plane Crash In Kingston, Ont., Police Say

    KINGSTON, Ont. - Police in Kingston, Ont., say there are "numerous fatalities" after a small plane crashed in a wooded area within the city limits.    

    Numerous Fatalities' After Small Plane Crash In Kingston, Ont., Police Say

    Abbotsford: Woman Struck By Pick-Up Truck On Clearbrook Road Dies

    At 5:07 am this morning, Abbotsford Emergency Services responded to a collision at the intersection of Clearbrook Road and Peardonville Road.

    Abbotsford: Woman Struck By Pick-Up Truck On Clearbrook Road Dies

    Prabhleen Matharu Murder: Family Of 21-Yr-Old Jalandhar Girl Killed In Surrey Still Clueless On Why She Was Shot Dead

    Gurdial Singh Matharu, the father of Prabhleen Kaur Matharu, 21, from Jalandhar who was shot dead in Surrey where she was working after studying management, is clueless on why she was targeted and is headed to see her body one last time.

    Prabhleen Matharu Murder: Family Of 21-Yr-Old Jalandhar Girl Killed In Surrey Still Clueless On Why She Was Shot Dead