LEGO plans Mars rover Curiosity model

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NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity, which for almost a year has been driving across the Red Planet, will be the next model to roll off LEGO’s CUUSOO production line, the toy company announced Friday, June 14. The Denmark-based LEGO Group chose a fan-built model of the car-size rover to be the next release in its CUUSOO line of building brick toys. “We learned that this product has niche appeal and strong demand from the space and education communities,” said LEGO’s Tim Courtney in a blog posted to the company’s website. “The product aligns well with the LEGO Group’s mission to ‘inspire and develop the builders of tomorrow,’ including those who will build our future in outer space.” CUUSOO, which in Japanese means “imagination” or, as it is sometimes translated, “wish,” is a website that invites LEGO fans to share their ideas for new products. Visitors to the website can vote for their favourite model concepts to be considered for the next LEGO CUUSOO set. Fan-submitted models need to collect 10,000 votes before they are reviewed for potential release. The Curiosity rover model qualified in August 2012, just weeks after the real six-wheeled spacecraft landed inside Gale Crater on Mars. Stephen Pakbaz, who goes by the username “Perijove” on the CUUSOO website, uploaded his idea for the LEGO version of the rover before Curiosity launched to Marsin November 2011. A mechanical engineer, Pakbaz worked at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., where he was involved in some of the design and testing of the real spacecraft. “He built the rover and submitted the project to further the educational outreach of the rover’s incredible mission and to inspire further public support for space exploration,” Courtney said in a video statement that accompanied his blog posting. “My hope was to have a set produced while the real rover was still active on Mars so that the model could help kids learn about the real rover’s discoveries as they occurred,” Pakbaz told collectSPACE.com in an interview last year. Curiosity, which NASA also refers to as the Mars Science Laboratory, just finished investigations in an area smaller than a football field where it had been working for the past six months. It will soon shift to its distance-driving mode to head for the base of Mount Sharp at the centre of Gale Crater. The roughly 5-mile (8 kilometres) trip to the mountain is expected to take about a year. That should give LEGO the time it needs to produce and release Pakbaz’s model, though when it will become available remains to be seen. “The final product is still in development,” Courtney wrote. “Exact pricing and availability is still being determined, so stay tuned.” “We will share that information as soon as we can,” he added.