Russellville junior constructs massive LEGO Titanic
News, Russellville, Z - News Main, Z - TOP HOME
 By  María Camp Published 
9:26 am Monday, February 14, 2022

Russellville junior constructs massive LEGO Titanic

For 17-year-old Russellville High School Junior Hank Cartee, putting together LEGO sets is a skill he’s been honing for a long time – since he was about 5 years old, when he put together his first set, a Toy Story project. He estimates he’s put together between 30-50 sets over the years, some small enough to fit in the palm of his hand and others much larger. Recently he built his largest set to date: a 9,090-piece replica of the R.M.S. Titanic.

Cartee completed the Titanic in five or six days – despite being in recovery from surgery to his dominant hand.

Measuring 4 and a half feet long, 18 inches high, 7 inches wide and 54 inches deep, the LEGO ship is truly titanic in comparison to Cartee’s other sets. It didn’t come with lighting, but he added tiny string lights to accentuate the finished piece. “I’ve always been interested in the Titanic,” explained Cartee, “and when I was little, I made an attempt at building a LEGO version, but it was much less sophisticated.”

The sets he buys now come with instruction manuals – the large ones, his mother Brittany Gault Richards noted, are practically as long as a book.

For the Titanic, and some of the other sets, putting them together isn’t the only challenge.

The Titanic set sold out quickly, as Cartee said he suspected it would, and remains in high demand still. Richards got online at midnight on the Sunday it was released to secure it for him. He had learned about the set from watching a TikTok video of the set’s creator talking about it, and he said he knew right away it was extra-special. He requested it as his sole Christmas present.

“I learn about most of the sets from YouTube or TikTok videos,” said Cartee, “and then I read about them to see if a particular set is one I really want. When I was younger, I would play with the sets and take them apart, but that always results in losing pieces. Now, I leave them up when they’re finished.”

He said most of his completed projects are in his game room, but the Titanic needed an extra amount of space to “stay afloat.” Careful to measure before purchasing, it turned out he had just the right amount of space on a dressed in his bedroom, and that’s where it now stays docked.

In other large projects, Cartee has put together a Spider-Man set of The Daily Bugle. It had been out of stock for a while when he found out it was available in Nashville. He used his Christmas money to pay for it and worked on it all day one Saturday. In total, it’s 3,772 pieces.

A set Cartee got around the age of 12 of Cinderella’s castle comes in at 4,090 pieces, and he bought that with Christmas money, too. “I love seeing it go from nothing and turning into something. It’s just fun, even though it can be very frustrating at times because it’s a tedious process.”

He explained that while he loves it, it’s a difficult process that tests his patience. “I won’t be able to find a piece, and I’ll get frustrated and quit, but then I’ll go back to it the next day and go right back to it. A lot of times, it’ll turn out the ‘lost’ piece was right in front of me the whole time.”

Richards explained another challenge along the way is if he gets something put together wrong. “Even one piece will mess up the whole thing,” she explained. “He’ll have to take it apart and fix it, and that’s really frustrating. He keeps going and always works it out in the end.”

Cartee said it’s incredibly rewarding to see everything come together after all the setbacks along the way. “It’s tedious, yes, but so much fun. It’s really awesome that I get to build them.”

In December the family visited the LEGO store and bought a Stranger Things set, coming in at 2,287 pieces.

Cartee said he’s tried other types of puzzles and kits, but they just don’t hold the same appeal. Other favorite LEGO sets include pieces from Star Wars and Harry Potter.

“My friend Jared Davis helped some on the Stranger Things set,” Cartee noted. “There’s a house you have to build twice, and he built one of them, and that probably took a day or two off the building process for me. It’s usually my own hobby, though sometimes friends have hung out while I worked on it.”

Also on Franklin County Times
Drone contraband is becoming a problem
Main, News, Russellville, ...
Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
April 15, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Area law enforcement officials say they support the idea of more authority to stop drones from delivering contraband into jails. Alabam...
Oliver: Too many children are being abused
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
April 15, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Franklin County deputies investigated 85 cases involving child and sexual abuse in 2025. “For a county the size of Franklin County, tha...
Sentencing delayed again in manslaughter trial
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
April 15, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Brandy Dowdy will have to wait even longer to learn how long she will serve in prison after her sentencing was delayed for the second t...
Garden club hosts plant, bake sale
Columnists, News, Red Bay
In the Community
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
April 15, 2026
RED BAY — The Red Bay Garden Club held its annual plant and bake sale Saturday at the high school greenhouse to raise funds for projects across the ci...
Has the city on a hill lost its shine?
Columnists, Opinion
April 15, 2026
Ronald Reagan used the “Shining City on a Hill” as a metaphor for the United States as a beacon for freedom and democracy in the world. Joe Biden ofte...
Delta Kappa Gamma learns gardening tips
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
April 15, 2026
Our April meeting of Delta Kappa Gamma at Calvary Baptist Church in Russellville featured a lively and practical program by Trace Barnett, a native of...
TVA president, CEO announces retirement
News
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
April 15, 2026
Less than a year after he was named president and CEO of the Tennessee Valley Authority, Don Moul told members of the board of directors he will be re...
Students’ art selected for State Capitol exhibit
News, Russellville
By Maria Camp camp@franklincountytimes.com 
April 15, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — The art of three Russellville Elementary School students is on display at the Alabama State Capitol through April 28. Khloe Ball, a fou...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *