Announcing “Numereji 2421” at BrickCon 2011 [News]

Yuri GagarinThis year marks the 50th anniversary of human space flight, as we celebrate Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin‘s historic orbit on April 12, 1961. This year also marks the start of a new but attenuated space age — one without NASA’s Space Shuttle program. In a sense, humanity stands at a fork in the road of our collective existence. Do we fold back in on ourselves and continue eking out a day-to-day existence on a planet with fewer and fewer resources, or do we adapt to our changing world and find new ways of living — both here at home and possibly beyond?

These are serious questions with philosophical, scientific, and political import. But they’re also pretty cool inspiration for building with LEGO! The collaborative display for readers of The Brothers Brick at BrickCon 2011 later this year is titled Numereji 2421.

For hundreds of years humans traveled through space like locusts, jumping from one planet to the next as they exhausted each home in turn. An outbound emigrant ship suffered a navigational and power failure that led to crash landing on Numereji, a terrestrial planet with a breathable atmosphere. Although the colonists crashed in an arid part of the planet, there may be a broad variety of environments beyond the horizon.

NASA Mars colony concept art by Pat Rawlings

They settled into their home and built the town of New Howland. They held little hope of response to their distress signal, and for thirty years they survived off the remains of their ship, struggling to live alongside the alien flora and fauna. In time, they built a thriving, sustainable community.

Things changed five years ago when rescuers unexpectedly arrived and tenuous links were established with Outworld communities. Waves of immigrants have begun to arrive, and New Howland has become the main spaceport. Will Numerians follow the old pattern or take the new path blazed by the pioneering crash survivors?

The theme of BrickCon 2011 is “Building a Community.”

NASA Mars colony concept artApplying this theme to the collaborative display we’ll all build together, in what direction will your contribution take our fragile colony? Will you build a wind farm or a smuggler’s base? A cyber-library or Terran Expeditionary Marines recruiting office? Our future rests in your hands. The choice is yours.

We don’t currently have any particular standards in mind for the display, though we are returning to minifig-scale. The inevitable mix of technologies, terrains, and building styles provides lots of opportunities for a diversity of contributions.

Sources of inspiration for this display include:

8 comments on “Announcing “Numereji 2421” at BrickCon 2011 [News]

  1. Creative Anarchy

    As distictive as it would look I’m opposed to red-brick MoC bases if I get to sway a vote. It’s hard to come up with that much red. A Large Brown layout could look cool. We could do tire-track styled roads out of 2-wide dark brown or black.

    Also I’m thinking it would help us make a more united looking display if we had some idea of what the immagrant ship originally looked like. It would give us a greater sense of what the shape and color of the salvage-built buildings look like.

  2. worker201

    This idea sounds like it requires a lot more cohesive design than the past few BrickCons. It’s sorta like Moonbase, except you’re trying to create a particular aesthetic. One art deco community hot-tub can throw the whole thing into chaos.

    Can we have some details about the geography of Numereji? Does it have oceans? Does it have copious free-flowing lava? Does it rain? What’s the daytime temperature like? Nighttime? How many moons are there?

  3. Andrew Post author

    Good questions and discussion so far — thanks, guys!

    The orangey hue implied by the images I happened to grab wasn’t intentional, as was the ambiguity of the description; we want to leave the possibility open for other terrains and a variety of construction styles. But yes, something like “A Brief Natural History of the Planet Numereji, with an Appendix of Recent Discoveries” might be in order. We’re certainly open to having just about anybody write that, if there’s interest from outside TBB contributors.

  4. BreadMan

    Sign me up! I think establishing a base terrain color would be a key first step. How about tan? Tan baseplates are more widely available than most other colors. Could also do city blocks in grey and use roadplates.

  5. Creative Anarchy

    I’m curious about the Fauna too. Did settlers bring Cattle or maybe ostriches in the ship or dogs? Are there indiginous animals that the Settlers were able to use? Can I make a TaunTaun cart? Are there any bley parrots roosting on com towers? Is there maybe a chance to use some of the new exotic colored frogs?

  6. Andrew Post author

    @BreadMan: Tan and gray seem achievable baseline colors for the terrain, yes. Great suggestion.

    @Creative Anarchy: Yes. :-)

  7. Thanel

    With hover/repulsorlift technology roadways could be dual-use as solar cells or gardens as well as thoroughfares. All kinds of potential.

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