I had this article in the drawer for a while 🗄️ and as March is about to end, I believe it’s time to publish this!
Did you know that March is International Ideas Month? It’s a time dedicated to celebrating creativity, innovation, and the power of new ideas—whether they’re big or small, work-related or just for fun!
I could sometimes say I have too many ideas and not enough time to realize them all. 😅 Adult life definitely shifted my focus a bit, but back in school, I loved turning ideas into reality—especially with Legos.
One of my biggest childhood fascinations? Amusement park rides. Not just for the thrill, but for the engineering behind them. Where I grew up, we didn’t have big amusement parks, but traveling fairs would come to town for a few weeks. While most kids were excited to ride, I was more interested in how everything worked—especially how these massive structures could fold up into a compact trailer and move from place to place.
Long story short, as a huge Lego fan, I decided to build a working model of a ride called "Crazy Surf"—basically, a row of seats moving up and down. I believe that it was 2016 when I spent my summer designing it, but since Legos aren’t exactly cheap, I found Lego Digital Designer—a CAD software from the Lego Group that let me create virtual models for free. Three months and ~10,000 bricks later, I had a fully designed, functional ride, complete with power functions and the ability to transform into a trailer, just like the real ones. I never got around to building it physically, but the more I think about it, the more I want to make it happen! 😃
Sadly, LDD retired a few years ago, but the Lego community (shoutout to BrickLink!) created their own version—BrickLink Studio—which even allows importing LDD models. I still have to polish my model (some pieces are missing due to misplacement) but the software has a brilliant model renderer 🤩 (this is not AI)
*2010s were ‘golden age’ for fairground rides when many people, such as MrDestroyer008, built incredible Lego amusement rides, including Mondlift and a massive 2.5m Ferris Wheel!
💡 Speaking of the Lego community, did you know that Lego fans can submit their own designs to Lego Ideas? Some user-created models have even become official Lego sets, like The Globe, Home Alone House, Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night, and many more.
Now, a few questions related to the 'ideas' theme:
Do you have any ideas you’ve always wanted to realize?
Where do your best ideas come from? → I like(d) sitting in my backyard, putting on some music, and closing my eyes.
What’s an idea you had that turned out amazing? → The latest one I can remember is moving my expense tracker from Excel to Jira—turned out even better than I expected!
How do you capture ideas before they disappear? → I just use Confluence now. Although, now when I think about it, I might switch to JPD 🤔
Feel free to drop your thoughts below—I’d love to hear how you turn ideas into reality. 🚀
Tomislav Tobijas
Your friendly Atlassian guy 🙂
Koios Consulting Ltd.
Zagreb, Croatia
277 accepted answers
6 comments