Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Brick Street View turns Google Maps into Lego

Add as a preferred source on Google

Swedish coder Einar Öberg has hacked an impressive layer on top of Google Street View inspired by Lego building blocks. Open up Brick Street View in your browser and you can tour around any part of the world as if it was constructed in Lego, complete with toy cars and trees. It’s perfect if you’ve always wanted to see your city in Lego form but just never had the blocks or the time to do it yourself.

The software Öberg has put together creates a pixelated mosaic of blocks based on the colors of Google’s imagery — it doesn’t work perfectly, but it’s a cool bit of coding nevertheless. The addition of a Lego sky backdrop, complete with Lego sun, is a nice touch too. To see a location you simply drop your Lego character onto a street, just as you do in the original Google Street View.

Recommended Videos

If you’re interested in the software that powers Brick Street View, Öberg has provided an About page with a little bit more information. LDraw, BRIGL, GSVPano, GSVPanoDepth, ThreeJS, Google Places API, and Google App Engine are some of the technologies involved. The finished result depends on the quality of the depth data provided by Google, Öberg says.

It’s a fun way of spending a few minutes of your weekend, if nothing else. Also worth a look is an earlier project by Einar Öberg called Urban Jungle Street View — in this case the data pulled from Google’s database is covered with foliage, as if you’ve just stepped into a post-apocalyptic world abandoned by humanity. It has an eerie, The Last of Us-type feel about it, and it’s another impressive showcase for Öberg’s programming talents.

David Nield
Former Contributor
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
This new video editor lets Claude organize, generate, and edit right on your timeline
Laptop running Claude Fable

For years, AI video tools have mostly lived outside the editing process. You generate a clip, download it, import it into your editor, and continue working. A new app called Palmier Pro aims to eliminate some of those extra steps by bringing AI directly into the video timeline.

The newly launched software, available for macOS, is being marketed as a video editor that Claude can use. Instead of treating AI as a separate chatbot or content generator, Palmier is designed to let an AI assistant interact with an active video project and make changes within it.

Read more
MIT experts just made a special memory. When humans forget, robots will just fetch the lost item
MIT’s new robot memory could make lost keys your robot’s problem
A robotic arm.

Robots may be the new best friend for forgetful humans. MIT researchers have developed a long-term memory framework for robots that can help them build a detailed mental model of large, complicated spaces. The system is called DAAAM, short for Describe Anything, Anywhere, Anytime, at Any Moment, and the goal is to let robots remember objects, locations, and details over time.

This might not sound headline-grabbing, though robots are still surprisingly bad at something humans do casually. You may remember that your keys were on the kitchen counter last night, or that a half-finished part was left in a factory bin. However, a robot working beside you would struggle to connect that object and location in a useful way.

Read more
A strange little electric nose may be the missing piece for smart fridges
The carbon nanotube chip detects food, allergens, and spoilage signals at room temperature.
Electronics, Hardware, Printed Circuit Board

UC Berkeley researchers have built an electric nose that can detect gases tied to spoiled food and common allergens more consistently than a human sniff test. The device uses a 16-sensor gas sensor chip that turns reactions with food-related gases into electrical signals.

Kitchen judgment can get messy because food doesn't always look or smell risky before it becomes a problem. Milk, eggs, chicken, fruit, and nuts release different chemical signatures, and people usually have to decide with whatever their nose catches in the moment.

Read more