Super Heroes Marvel

Peter Parker’s Apartment

A cramped Queens walk-up with a glider-riding pumpkin bomber crashing through the window, and somehow it works.

Brick Rated Score

4.3 out of 54.3/5

Set 76317 · 2025

Pieces402
Minifigs4
Year2025
Set number76317

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The verdict

I went in expecting another forgettable modular tie-in and came out genuinely charmed.

The apartment itself, split into a cluttered kitchen downstairs and a study and bedroom up top, feels lived in rather than staged, and the push button that sends part of the wall crashing down is the kind of small dumb joy that makes a set worth building twice. Hobgoblin is the reason to buy this one though, he has not had a decent LEGO outing since 2016 and this version, glider, pumpkin bombs, and all, earns the wait. If you already own the other two Marvel street sets, or you just want one really good Spider-Man diorama without committing to a whole block, this is the one I would grab.

Best for: Spider-Man fans who want one strong diorama-style build rather than a full modular street

The full review

What it is

I will admit I did not expect much walking into this one. LEGO has put out a string of Spider-Man buildings over the last few years and it is easy to get building fatigue. But Peter Parker's Apartment won me over almost immediately, mostly because it does not try to be a faithful recreation of any specific comic or movie scene. That freedom lets the designers pack in a genuinely fun little home: a cluttered kitchen on the ground floor, and a study and bedroom up top with a flip-up bed, a desk, a working computer setup, a camera, and a microscope. It reads like an actual apartment someone lives in, not a diorama built around a photo reference.

The catch

The build itself moves quickly given the piece count, and the standout moment is Hobgoblin crashing in on his glider, pumpkin bombs in hand. He has not had a proper LEGO release since 2016, and this version was worth the wait, a molded hood replacing the old cloth cape, a double-sided head with a suitably nasty grin, and printed pumpkin bombs with removable trans-orange flame pieces on top that feel like a small but deliberate upgrade. There is also a push-button function that sends part of the building collapsing, which is the kind of silly, satisfying detail that makes we want to reset it and trigger it again. Where the set stumbles a little is value. At $54.99 for 402 pieces, more than a few reviewers pointed out the price per piece runs high next to other sets in this price range, and Mary Jane's minifig mostly reuses parts from earlier figures rather than bringing anything new to the table.

Who it's for

If you are chasing a Spider-Man scene that actually feels like someone's home rather than a movie freeze-frame, or you just want Hobgoblin back on your shelf after almost a decade away, this is worth the money. Skip it if you are strictly counting pieces per dollar, or if you were hoping to connect it smoothly into a full modular street with the other two Marvel apartment sets, since each stands on its own rather than locking together into one block.

The parts story

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

Building this one feels less like assembling a building and more like furnishing a small apartment room by room. You start with the kitchen, cluttered with the kind of small appliance and food details that make a set feel inhabited, then work your way up to the study and bedroom, where the flip-up bed and desk setup with computer, camera, and microscope give Peter's side of the story some real texture. The collapsing wall section is rigged to a push button near the base, and it is a genuinely fun mechanical touch to fiddle with once the shell is finished.

The four minifigures carry most of the parts story here. Hobgoblin is the clear headline, his first appearance since 2016's Ghost Rider Team-up set, now with a molded hood recolored from the Moon Knight figure, a double-sided head, and printed pumpkin bomb accessories with removable trans-orange flame pieces that look sharper than any earlier version. Mary Jane comes with a printed pizza box, a nice small accessory even if her body uses mostly recycled parts, and Spider-Man rounds things out with a pack of web accessories alongside Anti-Venom. For 402 pieces, the real value sits in those four figures rather than raw brick count.

Fun facts

  • 0176317 is one of three separate Marvel modular street buildings released together, alongside 76324 Spider-Man vs. Oscorp and 76311 Miles Morales vs. the Spot, and reviewers at Brickset called this one their favorite of the trio.
  • 02Hobgoblin had not appeared as a LEGO minifigure since 2016's 76058 Spider-Man: Ghost Rider Team-up, making this his first outing in nearly a decade.
  • 03The set includes a push-button function that collapses part of the apartment structure, a play feature built specifically for dramatic battle poses rather than display.
  • 04BrickEconomy projects the set will retire around mid-2027, giving it a longer than average shelf life for a licensed Marvel set.

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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