TWO students have launched a community interest company focused on popular computer game Minecraft.

Children playing the game are being enlisted to help build designs for urban planning.

Megan Leckie and Joseph Palmer, of Brighton University believe children are experts and don’t always want to keep “blowing themselves up” on computers.

The two have launched Block Builders, a CIC that imports map details into Minecraft so models of real-world places can be created.

Minecraft, dubbed “virtual Lego”, was bought by Microsoft for 2.5 billion dollars in 2014 and now has more than 100 million registered players.

Joseph, who graduated with a BA(Hons) in design and craft in 2014 and MA sustainable design in 2016 is now studying a PhD at the university in the Business School.

He and Megan, studying MSc in town planning, met at the university in 2014.

They first used Minecraft with a group of eight to 13-year-old children from Lewes to redesign the town’s Phoenix Industrial Estate, which was earmarked for redevelopment.

This was part of a wider project funded by the Nominet Trust and created by Community21, the social design agency based at the university and which supports sustainable community development.

Megan said: “We sat with them to talk about the things they liked and they wanted to change the whole area.

“One 11-year-old turned to us and said: ‘We need to stop being so reliant on fossil fuels and start focusing on green energy’.”

The children turned what was a “dark and scary” place into green family area, with a park where alcohol and smoking is banned, wind turbines, a green house and allotments.

Megan said: “They created something really amazing.

“We showed adults and they were shocked it was created by children so young.

“So from here we thought this could be something that would be a good project to bring into the community and try and actually make a difference with.

“What we’ve realised is that these kids are experts – this is their world and when we show their work to adults they say ‘Oh, kids aren’t just on this silly game wasting time, blowing each other up’.”

Block Builders now brings in children to plan areas earmarked for redevelopment and their ideas are converted into 3D architectural models for working with.

It works with developers, local authorities, schools and educational trusts to engage with young people.

Funded by Innovate UK, the Government’s innovation agency, Block Builders is supported by Community21.

Block Builders has helped on a number of projects including the development of Cambridge Football Ground, Yorkshire Building Society’s “a place called home” branding campaign, and Brighton and Hove City Council’s plans to develop Valley Gardens.

Go to www.blockbuilders.co.uk/ to find out more.