Tudor Corner
The 2025 modular that finally lets the design team off the leash.
Set 10350 · 2025
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If you love the modular line and you've been waiting for one that feels genuinely new, this is an easy yes.
It's the 2025 Icons modular, a corner building packed with fresh Tudor half-timber techniques, no stickers, and one of the least repetitive builds in the whole series. The only real hitch is that a corner shape doesn't slot neatly into a straight row of your other modulars. Grab it if you want a centerpiece, think twice if you need something that lines up flush on the shelf.
Best for: modular collectors who want a showpiece corner, not another flat storefront
So here's the one modular fans have been waiting years for. Tudor Corner (10350) is the 2025 entry in the LEGO® Icons Modular Buildings line, and it's a proper corner building, the first since Boutique Hotel back in 2022. Across its 3,266 pieces you get a ground-floor pub called The Old Guarded Inn, a haberdashery, a clockmaker's workshop, and a cozy attic apartment stacked up top. It comes with 8 minifigures too, so the place actually feels lived in rather than empty.
What makes this set stand out is that the design team clearly got to cut loose. The half-timbered Tudor walls use a ton of clever sideways building, and there's a black-and-white checkered technique reviewers pointed out has never shown up in a modular (or really any other set) before. It's the rare big build where you're not slogging through the same wall section fifteen times. Every floor throws something different at you, and it moves quicker than the piece count suggests.
Now the honest bits. It's a corner building, which sounds like a plus until you try to line it up in a row with your Assembly Square and Cafe Corner. It wants to sit at the end of a block or be its own centerpiece, and the loud, detailed facade doesn't exactly whisper next to the calmer modulars. It's also a LEGO direct-to-consumer exclusive at 229.99 USD, so you won't stumble onto a 30 percent Amazon deal any time soon. That said, with no stickers and this much genuine design ambition, the value is there.
Bottom line: if you collect the modular line and you've been itching for one that pushes the techniques forward, this belongs on your shelf. It carries a 4.4 out of 5 Brickset community rating and a stack of perfect scores from the review sites, and it earns them. The only folks I'd steer away are people who specifically want a building that lines up flat with the rest of the street, or anyone hoping to snag it cheap. Everyone else, this is one of the strongest modulars in ages.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build works its way up floor by floor and each one has its own personality. The ground-floor pub sets the tone with warm nougat brickwork and pub fittings, then you move into the haberdashery and clockmaker's workshop where the interior detailing (tiny shelves, tools, furniture) keeps things interesting. The star of the show is the Tudor facade itself, built with heavy use of sideways SNOT and Slope 18 pieces to fake that half-timbered look, plus a black-and-white checkered pattern the design team called the freshest thing they'd done in a modular. The attic apartment caps it off. Notably, there's barely any of that soul-sapping repetition modulars are sometimes guilty of.
For parts nerds there's a lot to like. The set brings around 12 new recolors, including a dark tan cat, nougat bricks in several shapes, dark green containers, and pearl gold battle droid legs used as architectural trim rather than robot bits. Nine elements had only appeared in a single previous set, like reddish-brown window frames and sand blue round bricks. Printed pieces do all the heavy lifting since there are no stickers at all: pearl gold Tile Round 3x3 clock faces (a first on that mold), the haberdashery sign, the menu tile, the pub sign, and a sunflower lanyard shelf tile nodding to the hidden disabilities initiative. At roughly 7 cents a part for a premium modular, the value stacks up nicely.
Fun facts
- 01The ground-floor pub is called The Old Guarded Inn, a wink at 6067 Guarded Inn, the beloved 1986 LEGO Castle set, with designer Francois Zapf joking it's the same spot a few centuries later.
- 02Tudor Corner is only the second corner modular of the modern era, following 10297 Boutique Hotel from 2022.
- 03It's designer Francois Zapf's first full retail LEGO set, his only other credit being the 40729 Shackleton's Lifeboat gift-with-purchase.
- 04There isn't a single sticker in the box, every graphic detail from the pearl gold clock faces to the pub sign is printed straight onto the parts.
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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