LEGO Set 70670-1 Monastery of Spinjitzu Alternate build Ideas: Townhouses, Modular Rooms, and Neighborhood Rebuilds
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Monastery of Spinjitzu Rebuilds Viewed Through Its Own Parts
LEGO Set 70670-1 Monastery of Spinjitzu is built around home life, so its best alternates work when they keep a sense of rooms, doors, windows, and street-level storytelling.
Facade colors, roof pieces, interior hints, and small lifestyle details give the inventory a friendly modular direction. It can become a townhouse, a family-home expansion, or a neighborhood corner without losing the warmth of the original set.
That is why 70670 Modern Dojo, 70670 Modular, and Ninjago City expansion feel connected: each one keeps the set in a lived-in city or home setting while changing the footprint.
For this set specifically, the useful comparison is between 70670 Modern Dojo, 70670 Modular, Ninjago City expansion, and Ninjago City Extension: The Spinjitzu Dojo. That keeps the article anchored in Monastery of Spinjitzu's actual model list and lets the rebuild angle lean toward a fresh display direction.
For another building-centered comparison, Townhouse Pet Shop Cafe building alternate build inspiration is close enough to help builders think about facades, rooms, and compact street layouts.
A second useful companion is Hub City Clock Street Lights building alternate build inspiration, especially for readers comparing small city details across different rebuild articles.
The model gallery below keeps the populated Rebrickable categories intact.
Set-Specific Reading for 70670-1 Monastery of Spinjitzu
For this article, Monastery of Spinjitzu is judged through play value, silhouette, and shelf presence. The gallery mix is 2 full alternate builds and 4 modifications, with 70670 Modern Dojo, 70670 Modular, Ninjago City expansion, Ninjago City Extension: The Spinjitzu Dojo, Modular Cyberpunk City - Tea House and Power Station, and Bundle - Modular Cyberpunk City - Street Block giving the set its practical rebuild choices.
The designer lineup also changes the feel of the roundup: Zeah, brickgloria, cjtonic, and Konfu2ius bring different priorities to the same inventory, so the article can stay specific instead of treating every model as the same kind of alternate.
The official-name cues worth keeping in mind are Monastery and Spinjitzu; those words help steer the copy toward the actual set identity before the model gallery begins.
What the 70670-1 Inventory Makes Easier to Reimagine in 70670-1 Monastery of Spinjitzu
For LEGO Set 70670-1 Monastery of Spinjitzu, the most natural rebuild paths are:
- townhouse rebuilds
- modular family-home layouts
- skate-park side builds
- compact neighborhood displays
Alternate Builds
These are the biggest subject changes in the roundup, using Monastery of Spinjitzu as the starting inventory for a different finished model.
70670 Modern Dojo
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Designer: Zeah
70670 Modular
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Designer: Zeah
Modifications
These modifications keep some of the original set's personality visible while changing the staging, accessories, character, or display mood.
Ninjago City expansion
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Designer: brickgloria
Ninjago City Extension: The Spinjitzu Dojo
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Designer: cjtonic
View Ninjago City Extension: The Spinjitzu Dojo instructions by cjtonic
Modular Cyberpunk City - Tea House and Power Station
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Designer: Konfu2ius
View Modular Cyberpunk City - Tea House and Power Station instructions by Konfu2ius
Bundle - Modular Cyberpunk City - Street Block
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Designer: Konfu2ius
View Bundle - Modular Cyberpunk City - Street Block instructions by Konfu2ius
Monastery of Spinjitzu is strongest when the rebuild still feels like a place. Start with 70670 Modern Dojo and 70670 Modular, then use the remaining models to decide whether the parts should become a townhouse, a modular home scene, or a brighter neighborhood display.