Build

Quantum computers for your desk

Models of real IBM Quantum systems you can make yourself — from a weekend 3D-print with a Raspberry Pi inside to LEGO builds for the whole family.

RasQberry Two — a 3D-printed model of IBM Quantum System Two with glowing LEDs
RasQberry Two — 3D-printed at home
Quantego One, brick by brick
Quantego Two — a LEGO model of an IBM Quantum computer
Quantego Two, built from LEGO
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RasQberry Two ↗

3D-print a model of IBM Quantum System Two — with a real Raspberry Pi running quantum demos inside.

The flagship of the family: a 3D-printable model of IBM Quantum System Two with a Raspberry Pi inside, running real Qiskit demos on its display. Print the parts, assemble the cryostat, flash the prepared image — and you own a quantum computer model that actually computes.

  • The family flagship — print it at home, assemble it, run Qiskit on it
  • Functional model of IBM Quantum System Two
  • Active maker community
Exploded view of the 3D-printed RasQberry Two model, showing all printed parts
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Qutie ↗

Palm-sized quantum computer models, 3D-printable in one piece.

The smallest members of the family: cute, palm-sized models of quantum computers that print in one piece on any home 3D printer. No electronics, no assembly — just something to hold, give away, and start conversations with. Models and print instructions at qutie.org.

  • Prints in one piece — no assembly, no electronics
  • Fits in your hand, survives any conference bag
Qutie One and Qutie Two — palm-sized 3D-printed quantum computer models
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Quantego ↗

Build models of IBM Quantum computers from LEGO bricks.

Quantum computers made of LEGO: three models of IBM Quantum systems with complete part lists and building instructions. A family project in both senses — buildable with kids, presentable at work.

  • Three models — from palm-sized to display-worthy
  • Full brick lists and step-by-step building instructions
Quantego Two 1024 — a large LEGO model of an IBM Quantum computer
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RasQberry One ↗

The original — a functional model of IBM Q System One on a Raspberry Pi.

Where it all began: a 3D-printed model of IBM Q System One around a Raspberry Pi, running quantum computing demos. RasQberry One drew makers and educators together and triggered the community behind everything on this site. It’s still fully documented and buildable — new builds usually start with RasQberry Two.

  • The first major project of the family — it sparked this community
  • Featured by Hackster, EE Times & Springer
RasQberry One — the 3D-printed model of IBM Q System One with a Raspberry Pi inside