LEGO took centre stage ahead of the Miami Grand Prix when all 20 drivers take part in the drivers’ parade – in fully-drivable LEGO cars. Earlier this year, Motorsport.com visited one of the company’s ...
Lego and Formula 1 kicked off a multiyear partnership in 2025. Here's how that collaboration is providing value to the toy ...
It took 22,000 hours using four million bricks to pull off this epic build. The thing about Lego bricks is that you can build pretty much anything you can imagine. There are sets for the Millennium ...
Real Formula 1 drivers like Charles Leclerc and Lando Norris sat behind the wheels of these playful machines. They took the LEGO cars for a spin around the Miami circuit, giving fans a unique sight: ...
Before McLaren’s Oscar Piastri dominated the Miami Grand Prix, Lego stole the spotlight on the Formula 1 grid. For the driver parade, Lego unleashed its life-size, brick-built F1 cars — and the grid ...
The life-size LEGO Formula 1 cars hit the track at the Miami Grand Prix, leaving fans with a jaw-dropping response. Fans wait in line to take photos of a life-sized LEGO McLaren F1 car in the Grand ...
Just before the start of the 2025 Formula 1 season, we reported that Lego was going all-in to celebrate what would be the 75th anniversary season of the sport. That all-in attitude is on full display ...
When Nico Hulkenberg got onto the podium for the first time at this year’s British Grand Prix, the F1 driver was presented with a very unique trophy to mark his third-place finish. Along with ...
Believe it or not, LEGO is the biggest tire manufacturer in the world, producing over 300,000,000 rubber tires every year. That means they make more rubber tires than major brands like Goodyear, ...
The 17-foot-long vehicle is made up of 344,187 bricks in 17 colors. — -- One vehicle at the 2017 North American International Auto Show really stood out from the rest. Chevrolet unveiled a ...
From screen icons to engineering-heavy Technic builds, these Lego sets reveal just how fun car culture can be in brick form.
But what about an F1 race car? I mean, Lego already sells small versions of each team’s cars, but could you build a life-size version that you can actually drive on the circuit? It turns out you can.