Sea of Shipwrecks in LEGO® bricks at Maritime Museum
Mysterious shipwrecks are brought to the surface in the new exhibition, bringing creative LEGO® brick models together with maritime archaeology and real objects recovered from shipwrecks, in a fun-filled family summer activity program.
LEGO® brick models created by Ryan ‘The Brickman’ McNaught replicate shipwrecked vessels and wreck sites from around the world in intriguing detail – including RMS Titanic, Swedish warship Vasa, Dutch trading vessel Batavia, HMS Pandora, the Barangaroo Boat – recently discovered during construction works for Sydney Metro – and many more.
Discover stories behind real shipwreck artefacts and underwater images, and deep-dive into a web experience featuring the museum’s maritime archaeologists.
Visitors can get hands-on with LEGO® building and augmented reality experiences, alongside a summer holidays activity program that includes shipwreck stories, maritime archaeology dig sites, ship model making, science experiments and a Minifigure™ kids’ museum trail.
From the exhibition opening, museum model makers will progressively build the colossal LEGO® brick Titanic model, and there is a competition to win the Titanic LEGO® model set to build at home.
The featured wrecks include models of:
- The oldest known shipwreck which sank off Uluburun, Turkey, around 1300 BCE
- A Chinese ship that sank in 1323 near the Shinan islands, South Korea
- Vasa, a Swedish warship that sank in 1628 in Stockholm harbour
- Batavia, a Dutch trading vessel that sank in 1629 off the Houtman Abrolhos, Western Australia
- HMS Pandora which wrecked in 1791 on the Great Barrier Reef whilst on its way to hunt down the Bounty mutineers
- HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, both wrecked in 1848 off King William Island, Canada, whilst searching for the Northwest Passage through the Arctic
- RMS Titanic, the luxury steamship that sank in the North Atlantic in 1912
- MV Rena, the Liberian-flagged container ship that sank at Astrolabe Reef, New Zealand, in 2011
- Barangaroo Boat, a nine-metre-long boat discovered during an archaeological survey before construction of a new Metro station at Barangaroo. Barangaroo is named after a powerful Cammeraygal leader of the Eora nation, who lived at the time of initial European colonisation of the place that is now Sydney.
Brickwrecks: Sunken ships in LEGO® bricks is a collaboration between the Western Australian Museum, the Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Maritime Museum and Ryan “The Brickman” McNaught, now open at the Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Maritime Museum.