Woman upset after being denied entry to Vaughn Legoland

A Utah woman was denied entry to the LEGOLAND Discovery Centre near Toronto because she didn’t have any children with her.

Alice DeFriez told CTV News she was up visiting when she saw the alluring brochure at her hotel.

DeFriez said she’s been playing with the pint-sized building blocks since she was 12 years old and, at one time, even wanted to be an architect.

She told CTV she runs a Lego Club out of the library in her hometown of Heber City, Utah, and even hosts an annual building contest.

Sorry DeFriez, Lego Gandalf says ‘you shall not pass’.

According to the LEGOLAND website, children under the age of 17 must be accompanied by a supervisor who’s at least 18.

“Adults (18+) will not be admitted without a child, with the exception of Adult Only Nights,” the disclaimer reads.

Despite being refunded what she’d shelled out online for the ticket to go, DeFriez told CTV she was “embarrassed and humiliated” by the ordeal.

“I know plenty of adults who go to Disneyland who aren’t kids and don’t have kids and they aren’t turned away, embarrassed and humiliated,” she wrote in an email. “What harm is an adult doing? I bet an adult Lego enthusiast such as myself would get more out of it than a child.”

A marketing manager reportedly defended the policy two years ago when another vacationer was barred entry.

“It is a child attraction so we do have this in place to protect the families and the children that visit,” the company told CTV at the time.