Botanicals

Peace Lily

A quiet, grown-up build that actually looks like the plant sitting on your shelf

Brick Rated Score

4.2 out of 54.2/5

Set 11504 · 2026

Pieces474
Minifigsn/a
Year2026
Set number11504

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The verdict

I went into this one expecting another generic Botanicals filler set, and instead I got six lilies in three different stages of life, all built from the same clever handful of parts repeated with real intention.

The oversized windscreen leaves in that deep, glossy green are the first thing that grabbed me, they read as foliage in a way LEGO leaf pieces almost never manage. It is not a thinker of a build, it is a relaxed one, and that is exactly what it is supposed to be. If you want a calm evening project that ends with something genuinely pretty on your desk, this earns its spot.

Best for: adult builders who want a low-stress evening build that doubles as real home decor

The full review

What it is

I will be honest, I did not expect to like a fake peace lily this much. The set gives you six individual lilies, two still furled as buds, two half open, and two in full bloom, all sitting in a peach colored pot with rows of half cylinder pieces that actually read as a ceramic planter. The big windscreen leaves in glossy dark green are the standout for me, they are some of the largest and most eye catching leaf pieces LEGO has put out, and they genuinely change how convincing the whole arrangement looks from across a room.

The catch

Where I have to be straight with you is the price. At $49.99 for 474 pieces, this is on the higher end of what LEGO charges per piece in the Botanicals line, and a chunk of that piece count is soil, stems, and pot rather than showpiece elements. The build is also intentionally soothing rather than challenging, you are repeating the same handful of techniques across six flowers, so if you want your hands and brain both working hard, this will feel too gentle. The leaves are poseable, which is nice for customizing the arrangement, but that same flexibility means a bump or a move can knock them out of position.

Who it's for

This is a set for someone who wants a calm, low pressure build that ends with a genuinely attractive piece of decor, a plant lover who cannot keep real plants alive, or a gift for someone who has everything but no LEGO houseplants yet. If you are chasing a technical challenge or maximum value per dollar, skip it and look toward the bigger Botanicals bouquets or a Technic set instead.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

Building this one felt less like assembling a model and more like arranging real stems. You build each lily individually, in one of its three life stages, then plant them together into the peach colored pot base with a layer of soil texture underneath. There is a nice rhythm to it, small repeated sub builds rather than one long continuous structure, which makes it an easy set to pick up and put down over an evening.

The real charm is in the parts. The dark green windscreen pieces used as leaves are oversized and glossy in a way that makes them some of the most convincing foliage LEGO has made. The spadix, the little central stalk on a peace lily, is built from a recolored carrot piece on the half open flowers and topped with a popcorn piece on the fully bloomed ones, a genuinely clever bit of part repurposing that New Elementary and other parts-focused reviewers called out specifically. The white petal, technically a modified leaf called a spathe on a real peace lily, wraps around cleanly and gives each bloom its shape without feeling like a flat sticker of a flower.

Fun facts

  • 01The white petal-like part of a real peace lily is not actually a flower petal, it is a modified leaf called a spathe, and LEGO's designers leaned into that botanical detail with the build.
  • 02The set includes six lilies split across three growth stages, two furled buds, two half open blooms, and two lilies in full flower, so no two stems in the arrangement look identical.
  • 03Designers repurposed a recolored carrot piece to form the spadix on the half bloomed lilies and a popcorn piece for the same part on the fully open flowers.
  • 0411504 Peace Lily released on January 1, 2026 as part of a four set Botanicals wave alongside Daisies, Flowering Cactus, and Tulip Bouquet.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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