Famous Tourist Spots in Los Angeles

LEGO1 — Famous Tourist Spots in Los Angeles (Travel Prompt Generator)
Outputs
Output Box 1 — Required Image Brief
6 views on one real parts only image of this Lego block model as you would build it from Lego blocks and parts using these plans. The 6 real block views are of the Lego model in 6 different Sizes in realistic settings. Make 6 different sized separate Exterior HD images and 6 interior images guaranteed to use ONLY real LEGO parts. show me a detailed real parts only Lego brick full side view of this Lego Block model in someone's hand, 1/8 size scale with Parents and kids playing.
Builder Brief
Detailed Prompt (LegoFan Plans)
BoM Summary / Sub‑Assemblies
BrickLink Studio Integration
  1. Import the BoM XML as a Wanted List at BrickLink; in Studio, File → Import → BrickLink XML.
  2. Use the palette CSV to seed color availability; approved substitutions are noted in the table.
  3. Rebuild sub‑assemblies (core, shell, terrain, accessories) then join; keep Technic spine intact.
  4. Generate Instruction steps: chassis → modules → detail dressing → sticker pass.
Research Notes — Los Angeles Landmarks
  • Hollywood Sign. Original 1923 sign letters ~30 ft wide and ~43 ft tall; current letters 44 ft tall, unveiled 1978. citeturn0search8turn0search0
  • Griffith Observatory. Admission free; offers free public telescope viewing on open nights. citeturn0search9
  • Santa Monica Pier. Looff Hippodrome (1916) houses historic carousel (PTC #62 since 1939). citeturn0search10
  • Walt Disney Concert Hall. Gehry switched exterior cladding to metal; iconic “silver sails.” citeturn0search4
  • TCL Chinese Theatre. Forecourt hand/footprints tradition; opened 1927; IMAX renovations in 2013–15. citeturn0search5
  • LACMA — Urban Light. Chris Burden’s functioning restored streetlamps; solar powered; lit nightly until 10 pm. citeturn0search6
  • Venice/Muscle Beach. Origins of U.S. fitness boom (1934) near Santa Monica Pier; Venice platform later. citeturn0search7turn0search14
  • Getty Center. Richard Meier–designed hilltop complex; signature geometric white forms. citeturn0search3turn0search11
Use these facts to anchor signage tiles, diorama plaques, and printed micro‑details.