Street Skate Park
A modular skate plaza that rewards rearranging more than it rewards showing off.
Brick Rated Score
Set 60364 · 2023
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
What sold me on this one was how the ramps and rails snap apart and clip back together in different orders, so you are never stuck with one layout.
It is a low, wide, colorful little corner of the city rather than a showpiece building, and I like it best as a companion set you drop next to a bigger City build. It is not going to wow a display shelf on its own, and at 454 pieces for the price the value feels average, but as a snack sized build with genuinely likeable minifigures it earns its keep. Get it for a City collector who wants street furniture and characters, skip it if you need a centerpiece.
Best for: City collectors who want a rearrangeable street scene and a fun minifig lineup, not a display centerpiece
What it is
This set is a little skate plaza built out of ramps, rails, a half pipe, and a graffiti covered wall, and what got me was that none of it is locked into one shape. The sections click together on Technic pins so you can slide the quarter pipe over here, swap the rail run over there, and end up with a layout that looks nothing like the box art if you want it to. That is a genuinely nice touch for a set this size, because most small City sets give you one fixed scene and that is that.
The catch
I will be honest about where it falls short. At 454 pieces it sits at a price point where a lot of builders expect more in the box, and four minifigures for a set this size is thin by City standards, especially when you compare it to other sets in the same wave that pack in more figures and props. The boombox is a printed sticker rather than a molded piece, which is a small thing but the kind of detail that adds up when you are weighing value. The building itself is also quick and simple, so if you are after a challenging build this will not scratch that itch.
Who it's for
Where this set really shines is the cast of characters. You get two sided torso printing, a double sided face on one figure, leg printing, and a skateboarder with a printed prosthetic leg, only the second LEGO figure ever to get that detail. If you collect City minifigs or want a fun, low commitment build to pair with a bigger set, this is worth having. If you need a set that impresses on a shelf by itself, look elsewhere in the lineup.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this one feels more like assembling stage furniture than a building. You work through compact modular chunks, ramps, a rail, a half pipe, a little shop counter, each finished in well under an hour, and then spend the fun part clicking them into different arrangements. It is an easy, relaxed build with nothing tricky in it, which makes it a good pick for a younger builder or anyone who wants a quick win.
The standout here is the minifig sheet rather than any single brick. The skateboarder with the printed prosthetic leg is a genuine first for the theme in this style, and the two sided torsos and double sided face add more personality than you usually get at this price. The first ever black BMX bike is a nice small collectible for anyone tracking City accessory pieces, and the skateboard, scooter, and in line skates round out a surprisingly generous prop count even though the overall part count stays modest.
Fun facts
- 01This is only the second LEGO minifigure ever produced with a printed prosthetic leg, following the wheelchair basketball player from years earlier
- 02The set includes the first black BMX bike piece to appear in a LEGO set
- 03It was released August 1, 2023 with an RRP of 67.99 dollars and is now marked retiring soon on LEGO's own site
- 04True North Bricks clocked total build time at roughly 1.5 to 2.5 hours across three separate instruction booklets
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews
World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's really one enormous mosaic.

Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.

Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds I've done.