
One of the most noteworthy of the new parts is the Fiber Optics Element. New Stuff! (For me)īesides being the largest set I've ever built at the time, there were a couple of other things in this set that were a first for me. Please join me on this trip back in time, as I'm rebuilding my childhood favorite. It's complexity and amount of functions was never seen before in a customer set, and even for today's standards it is still an impressive piece of machinery. It is the 2nd set to feature gear shifters and one of the first with the FOS system. It was one of the first sets to introduce Thick Liftarms, slowly starting the age of studless designs. With 1366 parts, it passes the 8880-1 Technic Super Car by 20 parts, making it the biggest Technic set at the time. Objectively, this is still an amazing set. I rather sleep in an alley with this set next to me, than having a house without my space shuttle. If I ever really get into financial problems, and need to sell everything to keep a roof over my head, this one stays. I don't remember the exact time, but I must have built for at least 2 days. But it was mine! That night, I put the set on my nightstand, so I would be sure the next morning it wasn't a dream. The payment took a while, counting a load of coins. It took more than a year, saving up birthday-money, earnings from my paper-route and buying no other LEGO, but eventually the glorious day came! I still remember going to the toy store, Speelgoedwinkel De Speelboom in Goor, the Netherlands, walking in, picking up the set and placing it on the counter. I don't know the exact price anymore, Brickset says $158,-, in my head it was somewhere high in the 200 Dutch guldens, so max €150,- now. My autism with accompanying obsessions probably played a role. I don't exactly know how or why it happened, but I decided that this set needed to be in my possession. Money was tight growing up, and this was looking to be another one of those 'never-gonna-happen'-things, of which the list was getting pretty long. This was the perfect combo! Such a massive, beautiful set, with so many functions and new things to drool over in the toy store. I was still heavily interested in everything that took place outside of the atmosphere, and I was at peak Technic interest. The 8480-1 Space Shuttle came at the perfect time for me as a 13 year old kid. Especially great personal memories, what might play a role in naming this the best set ever. This is the single greatest set LEGO has ever released! What can I say.
#LEGO SPACE SHUTTLE OLD FULL#
Find out more in our full Lego International Space Station review.NOTE: This review was written before the release of the 10283-1 NASA Discovery Space Shuttle.But when it’s all built, this is a very impressive model. Putting the solar panels together is repetitive though, and by their very nature they’re a little flimsy and easily knocked out of place. And there are even tiny versions of the NASA Space Shuttle, SpaceX Dragon, and Boeing CST-100 Starliner to give the International Space Station a sense of scale.

Real-life features, such as the Integrated Truss Structure, habitation modules, and logistics carriers have been faithfully recreated.

What is to be seen, though, is a glorious replica of the ISS, squeezing in more details than we could have imagined. Thankfully, Lego delivered more than we hoped for, and there isn’t a single sticker to be seen on this model. Nobody likes stickers on a Lego model, especially not that many. Why? Well, it seemed that all of those solar panels could be stickers, rather than printed bricks. When Lego first announced the International Space Station (ISS) – a fan-designed model from the Lego Ideas range – we were a little concerned.
