LEGO Reveals Its Largest-Ever Sagrada Família Set in Honor of Antoni Gaudí's Centenary
It is not often that a toy announcement stops architects, design enthusiasts, and casual LEGO fans in their tracks all at once — but that is exactly what happened when LEGO unveiled its brand-new Sagrada Família set in 2026. Designed to honor the centenary of Antoni Gaudí, the legendary Catalan architect who died in 1926, this monumental new release is being celebrated as the largest and most intricate LEGO set the Danish toy giant has ever produced. Social media lit up almost instantly, with one commenter perfectly capturing the collective mood: "I am definitely buying this one."
Whether you are a lifelong LEGO collector, an architecture aficionado, or simply someone who has always been mesmerized by Gaudí's otherworldly vision in Barcelona, this set deserves your full attention.
Why the Sagrada Família? Why Now?
The timing of this release is no coincidence. Antoni Gaudí died on June 10, 1926, after being struck by a tram in Barcelona. One hundred years later, the world is marking his legacy with renewed energy — and LEGO has chosen to contribute in the most fitting way imaginable: by letting fans build his most iconic masterpiece, brick by brick.
The Basílica de la Sagrada Família has been under construction since 1882 and, remarkably, it is still not fully complete today. Its gravity-defying spires, organic stone facades, and breathtaking stained-glass-inspired interiors have made it one of the most visited monuments in Europe. A UNESCO World Heritage Site and a symbol of Barcelona itself, the Sagrada Família is arguably the most ambitious architectural project in modern history. For LEGO, which has long celebrated architecture through its dedicated Architecture series, this set represents something far more profound than a product launch — it is a tribute.
What Makes This Set So Special?
Details surrounding the full piece count and official price point are continuing to generate buzz across design and LEGO communities worldwide, but what is already clear is that this release pushes the boundaries of what a LEGO set can be. Here is what enthusiasts and early commenters are particularly excited about:
- Record-breaking scale: The Sagrada Família set is being described as LEGO's largest set to date, surpassing even beloved behemoths like the LEGO Eiffel Tower and the LEGO Titanic in terms of ambition and complexity.
- Architectural authenticity: The design team worked closely with reference to Gaudí's original blueprints and the real-world structure to ensure that the signature spires, hyperboloid windows, and naturalistic stonework textures are faithfully represented in brick form.
- Dual facade representation: One of the most talked-about aspects of the set is its inclusion of both the Nativity Facade and the Passion Facade, capturing the contrast between Gaudí's original ornate, life-affirming side and the starker, more angular posthumous interpretation.
- Interior detail: Unlike many large-scale LEGO architecture sets that focus purely on exteriors, this Sagrada Família model reportedly includes interior elements that reference the forest-like columns and the luminous nave that visitors find so overwhelming in person.
- Collector-grade presentation: The set is expected to come with detailed booklet content exploring Gaudí's life, the basilica's construction history, and the design process behind translating the building into LEGO form.
The Community Reaction Has Been Extraordinary
Within hours of the announcement, comment sections across design publications, LEGO forums, and social media platforms were flooded with responses ranging from awe to outright excitement. "I am definitely buying this one" became something of an unofficial rallying cry, with users echoing the sentiment in dozens of languages. Architecture fans praised LEGO for the seriousness of its design commitment, while longtime LEGO collectors pointed out that this set belongs in the same conversation as the brand's most celebrated releases of the past decade.
Several commenters also drew attention to the emotional resonance of the project. Gaudí himself is buried in the crypt beneath the Sagrada Família, meaning the building is, in a very real sense, both his greatest work and his resting place. The idea of building that structure with your own hands — even in miniature form — carries a weight that purely fictional or commercial LEGO themes simply cannot replicate.
LEGO Architecture: A Legacy of Celebrating Great Design
The LEGO Architecture theme has been running since 2008 and has gifted fans with brick versions of landmarks including the Burj Khalifa, the Sydney Opera House, Fallingwater, and the Empire State Building. However, the scale and cultural significance of the Sagrada Família set appears to elevate it beyond the standard Architecture series into a category of its own — one where LEGO's Creator Expert and Icons lines intersect with genuine cultural commemoration.
For Gaudí centenary projects happening around the world in 2026, from exhibitions in Barcelona to retrospectives in museums across Europe and North America, the LEGO release arrives as one of the most accessible and shareable tributes available to the general public. You do not need to book a flight to Barcelona to spend hours absorbed in the details of this building — though, after building the LEGO version, you may well want to.
Should You Add It to Your Collection?
If you are on the fence, consider this: large-scale LEGO sets tied to real-world anniversaries or cultural moments have a history of becoming sought-after collector's items. The LEGO Colosseum, released in 2020, quickly became one of the brand's most celebrated sets. The Eiffel Tower set sold out repeatedly on release. A Sagrada Família set of this scale and emotional resonance, released in the very year the world marks Gaudí's centenary, has all the hallmarks of a future classic.
Beyond collectibility, there is the experience of building it to consider. Complex LEGO sets of this nature offer dozens of hours of focused, meditative construction — a quality that both adults and older children consistently rank among the most rewarding ways to spend time away from screens.
Final Thoughts
Antoni Gaudí once said that his great client was not the Church, but God — and that God was in no hurry. One hundred years after his death, the Sagrada Família still reaches toward the Barcelona sky, still unfinished, still breathtaking. Now, LEGO has given the world a way to hold a piece of that dream in their hands. If there was ever a set worth the hype, this appears to be it. We understand entirely why the comment sections are overflowing with one simple, heartfelt declaration: I am definitely buying this one.

