Yanko Design

The 5 Best LEGO Designs of May 2026 for Collectors & Design Lovers

May 2026 is one of the most eclectic and genuinely impressive months LEGO has assembled in recent memory. The lineup stretches across an almost improbable range of reference points, from Victorian astronomy and space photography fresh off the Artemis II mission to British absurdist comedy and Parisian haute couture, and in each case the people behind these builds have done something more ambitious than simply reproduce a recognizable subject. They’ve found a reason for it to exist in brick form specifically, and that distinction matters.

The five builds collected here sit at different points on the spectrum from official sets to community MOCs, but they share one defining quality. Each one earns its shelf space with a level of craft and intention that makes conventional display objects feel considerably less interesting by comparison. Whether you’re a collector, a casual admirer, or someone who simply appreciates when a design medium gets pushed somewhere unexpected, this month offers five compelling reasons to make room.

1. LEGO Ministry of Silly Walks

Few comedy performances have earned the kind of cultural permanence that John Cleese’s Silly Walk claimed in 1970. Fifty-six years later, the sketch remains the fastest and most widely understood shorthand for British absurdism in popular culture, and LEGO has finally given it the brick-built treatment it deserves. Mr. Teabag arrives in plastic form with exaggerated proportions that somehow capture every ridiculous knee-flinging motion from the original performance. The Technic joints embedded throughout are not decorative additions. They allow for a genuine range of articulation, letting you pose this figure mid-stride with a conviction that most articulated collectibles simply cannot match.

The facial expression is the detail that lifts this build above novelty status entirely. The sculptors working on Mr. Teabag captured his deadpan seriousness with a precision usually reserved for museum-quality reproductions, and the resulting silhouette reads as instantly recognizable from across any room. The bowler hat and umbrella complete the bureaucratic aesthetic with the restraint that good comedy has always required, nothing exaggerated beyond what the source material already provided. Display it alongside LEGO architecture, and it holds its ground completely, functioning as a standalone celebration of British wit that works whether you’ve seen the sketch fifty times or are encountering the joke for the very first time.

2. LEGO Hermès Birkin

The Hermès Birkin has one of the most theatrical purchasing rituals in luxury retail. You cannot simply walk into a boutique on Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré and ask for one. Hermès makes you earn it, cultivating a relationship with a sales associate over months and sometimes years, demonstrating cultural fluency with the house before they will even have the conversation about availability. LEGO Ideas builders BOI_Design and KittyJW have found a considerably more democratic workaround. Their MOC reimagines the Birkin 20 Faubourg, the special edition inspired by Hermès’s flagship Paris store, as approximately 1,400 bricks of deep navy, dark green, and gold that carry the mythology of the original without the waiting list.

What makes this MOC genuinely exceptional is its dual identity. The exterior facade doubles as a miniature rendering of 24 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré itself, complete with arched boutique windows and the house’s signature orange awnings, a level of specificity that rewards anyone who knows the address on sight. And it opens. Inside, a secret runway scene transforms this from a luxury replica into a piece of interactive design with something worth discovering. For collectors who appreciate the gravity of the fashion world but not necessarily its access barriers, this build offers something rare: the cultural weight of the Birkin in a format that anyone can actually acquire.

3. LEGO Icons Road Bike

Cycling culture has always had a particular obsession with beautiful objects. The sport attracts a breed of enthusiast willing to spend hours debating titanium stem weights or the relative merits of ceramic bearing sets, and the objects at the center of that obsession tend to be genuinely elegant pieces of functional design. The LEGO Icons Road Bike (set 11380) understands this audience precisely. At 1,015 pieces and $129.99, it builds into a red road bike that stands 14.2 inches tall and stretches a full 23.6 inches in length on its stand, a genuinely substantial presence that captures the aerodynamic geometry of a road frame with an accuracy that will speak directly to anyone who has ever spent a lunch hour deep in a component forum.

The engineering choices go significantly further than surface accuracy. The set includes a fully functional drivetrain with a one-way gear chain drive mechanism, meaning the rear wheel pedals with genuine freewheel action. Brake calipers, derailleurs, and clipless pedals are rendered with the kind of specificity that separates a serious build from a shelf decoration. A removable water bottle and a wheel-lift bike stand complete the picture. Arriving ahead of the summer sporting season, the LEGO Icons Road Bike gives cycling enthusiasts an indoor companion that celebrates the object of their obsession in an entirely new medium, one that requires no maintenance schedule, no garage, and no chamois cream.

4. LEGO Artemis II Earthset Photo

On Christmas Eve 1968, astronaut Bill Anders looked out of Apollo 8’s window and took Earthrise, arguably the most reproduced environmental photograph in history, an image that reframed humanity’s relationship with the planet more profoundly than any scientific paper ever had. On April 6, 2026, the Artemis II crew performed a near-identical act, pointing their cameras backward as Orion swung behind the Moon and capturing Earth in the process of setting below the lunar limb. That photograph existed for barely nine days before LEGO builder BuildingDreams submitted an Ideas project to preserve it in brick form, a response time that says everything about how significant the moment felt to those watching from the ground.

The result is a 48 by 32 centimeter wall-art panel that translates the soft curves of Earth’s atmosphere, the brown and blue patchwork of continents and ocean, and the pale grey sweep of lunar regolith into a grid of plastic studs with a faithfulness that genuinely stops you mid-scroll. As a design object, it functions simultaneously as wall art, historical document, and conversation piece, a brick-built record of one of the most significant human achievements of 2026, rendered in a medium that will outlast any digital photograph on a phone screen. For space enthusiasts and design collectors with wall space to commit, this is a compelling reason to watch the LEGO Ideas voting page.

5. LEGO Functional Vintage Telescope

There is a specific category of object that makes a room feel more deliberately assembled: the brass sextant on the windowsill, the leather atlas propped open on a reading table, the tripod-mounted telescope angled toward a high window. Bricked1980’s LEGO Ideas submission belongs in that category without qualification. At around 600 pieces, the Functional Vintage Telescope stands 40 centimeters high and stretches 53 centimeters in length, with a color palette of deep reddish-brown and pearl gold that reads as genuinely antique from across any room. Modeled on a classic brass refractor telescope mounted on a fully articulated tripod, this is the kind of build that makes visitors assume you’ve spent considerably more than the actual price.

The period detail throughout is what elevates this from a visually striking model to something that feels genuinely researched. The barrel is rendered in warm dark brown with surface texture suggesting wrapped leather or lacquered wood, banded at intervals with pearl gold rings that evoke the ferrules of a real antique instrument. The tripod legs splay convincingly outward in reddish-brown, connected at the apex by Technic hardware functioning as an azimuth mount that allows the barrel to rotate and pivot in all directions. A small gold chain hangs from the objective end, terminating in what appears to be a lens cap. It is exactly the kind of fussy, historically accurate touch that separates a remarkable build from a merely good one.

Bricks Worth Believing In

May 2026 confirms something that LEGO enthusiasts and design writers have understood for years: the best builds are never just toys. They function as design objects, historical records, cultural statements, and engineering exercises, sometimes all four at once. The five designs collected here represent the full range of what brick-built creativity can achieve this month, from a 600-piece Victorian telescope with genuine period accuracy to a 1,400-brick homage to fashion’s most mythologized handbag.

What connects all five is a commitment to solving a real design problem. Each creator had to answer the same fundamental question: how do you translate physical comedy, haute couture, cycling precision, space photography, or Victorian craftsmanship into interlocking plastic bricks without losing what made the original worth caring about? These builds answer that question with conviction, and they are worth your attention whether you add one to your cart this month or simply appreciate the quality of thinking that went into making them.

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