
If you grew up watching Naruto slurp down bowl after bowl of ramen at Ichiraku, you already know that the little noodle shop tucked in the village of Konoha carries more emotional weight than most fictional restaurants ever could. It is the kind of place that shows up at every turning point in the story, the quiet anchor in a series full of big fights and even bigger feelings. So when twin brothers David and Diego Escalona, known as DadiTwins, decided to recreate it in LEGO form, they were not just building a set. They were building a piece of pop culture memory, brick by brick.
The project, officially titled Naruto: Ichiraku Ramen Shop, was moved into LEGO Ideas’ “Parking Lot” on July 14, 2026, marking the first time in the concept’s long history that LEGO has genuinely entertained the possibility of turning it into an official product. To understand why that matters, you have to know that this is the fourth time DadiTwins have submitted this project. Fourth. They first reached the required 10,000 supporter votes in August 2020. Then again in October 2021. Then a third time in 2023 to mark Naruto’s 25th anniversary. Each time, LEGO passed. Each time, the community came back and voted again.
Designer: DadiTwins

The Parking Lot, for the uninitiated, is LEGO Ideas’ version of “we’re not saying no, we’re just saying not yet.” It is a holding stage where projects that weren’t immediately greenlit are kept under consideration for potential official release. It has produced actual sets before. Downton Abbey made it through. So did The Old Man and the Sea. The status does not guarantee anything, but it is a meaningful shift from flat-out rejection, and for a project that has been rebuilt and resubmitted across more than half a decade, it feels like a long-overdue acknowledgment.


The set itself is genuinely impressive. At roughly 1,600 pieces across a 22-by-24-stud footprint, it recreates Ichiraku as it appears during the Land of Waves arc, right at the beginning of the series before everything gets complicated. The ground floor has a working kitchen and a four-seat ramen bar. The upper floor, which was never actually shown in the anime, was invented by the designers as Teuchi’s apartment, complete with a bedroom and bathroom accessible via a rear staircase. That choice tells you a lot about how much thought went into this. It is not just a replica. It is an expansion of a world people already love.


Eight minifigures round out the set: Naruto, Sasuke, Sakura, Hinata, Kakashi, Iruka, Teuchi, and one more. The designers also made the case that ramen itself, now a global obsession that has arguably outpaced sushi in worldwide popularity, gives this set crossover appeal for people who have never touched a manga in their lives. A beautifully detailed ramen shop, built from 1,600 pieces, with a cozy interior and a blue-striped awning? That is an easy sell, dattebayo or not.


What makes this story genuinely moving is the persistence behind it. DadiTwins did not submit once, get rejected, and move on. They revised. They commemorated anniversaries with updated designs. They kept making the case for a concept that tens of thousands of people clearly wanted to see made real. That kind of dedication from fan creators is rare, and LEGO Ideas, for all its genuine appeal as a platform, does not always reward it quickly.

Whether the Ichiraku Ramen Shop becomes an official LEGO set remains to be seen. LEGO’s July 2026 update says the company is “looking into the possibility,” which is cautiously optimistic phrasing at best. But the fact that it made it to the Parking Lot after four attempts says more about what fans are willing to fight for than any official statement ever could. And if LEGO does eventually greenlight it, I think this set would be one of the more emotionally resonant releases the line has ever produced. Some places, fictional or not, just mean something.
