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The grand staircase is a huge achievement and the way the second floor acts as a mezzanine so you can see all the way down to the ground floor really adds to the perceived sense of scale. And considering the space limitations, the designers have done an incredible job of distilling the New York Sanctum’s sprawling interior down into Lego form. Sure, you could wish for a few extra studs to extend the interior, but almost every modular building or space-ship interior could be improved with just a little more room. If you’re a Marvel aficionado, you’ll have a blast seeking out all of the many Easter eggs and references, yet the interior still looks tasteful and remarkably uncramped.

The Lego Sanctum Sanctorum isn’t just a first-rate superhero set, it’s a beautiful modular build that will entice plenty of non-Marvel fans with its striking architecture and detailed interior.

The bannister comes together with a rather ingenious use of Bar Holders with Clips pieces and towards the end of the ground floor build, you tackle the stairs that branch left and right. You build up the walls forming the hidden sections that will ultimately sit beneath the mezzanine before progressing onto the grand staircase. You begin by tackling the 32 by 32-stud baseplate, using lots of grey, square tiles to form the pavement and more tiles to form the attractive checkered tiling on the Sanctum’s ground floor. You start from the baseplate and work upwards the linear nature of the build is extremely enjoyable and as always, the Minifigures are evenly spread throughout. Each booklet deals with one of the three floors. The build is spread across 18 bagged sections, further divided via three separate instruction booklets.
