Home Architecture News LEGO Builds the World’s Biggest FIFA World Cup Trophy in New York With 1.36 Million Bricks
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LEGO Builds the World’s Biggest FIFA World Cup Trophy in New York With 1.36 Million Bricks

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As the FIFA World Cup 2026 enters its decisive final stages, the LEGO Group has transformed one of football’s most recognizable symbols into an architectural-scale public installation. Standing 8.47 meters (27 feet) tall in Rockefeller Plaza, New York City, the giant LEGO FIFA World Cup Trophy is a promotional spectacle, a feat of design, engineering, and large-scale fabrication.

Unveiled by Brazilian football legend Cafu on July 6, the installation marks the opening of the LEGO Fan Zone, creating an immersive public destination where architecture, play, and sport intersect ahead of the FIFA World Cup Final.

A Monument Built Brick by Brick

Constructed from 1,363,402 LEGO bricks, the trophy is officially the largest mobile LEGO build ever created. While its shimmering gold appearance echoes the iconic FIFA World Cup Trophy, the project demanded far more than stacking plastic bricks.

The model rises 8.47 meters high and contains approximately 4.2 tonnes of LEGO elements, supported internally by a 3.5-tonne steel framework that ensures structural stability while allowing the installation to be dismantled, transported, and reassembled.

Developed over eight months, the project required 7,040 hours of model building and assembly by a multidisciplinary team of 59 specialists, including designers, engineers, model builders, and assembly technicians at LEGO’s Model Production facility in Kladno, Czech Republic.

The team engineered it into 16 modular sections, allowing rapid installation at Rockefeller Plaza while preserving precision across the enormous build.

When Public Art Meets Engineering

Although built from a children’s construction toy, the project shares many characteristics with temporary architectural installations.

The internal steel armature carries the structure’s weight while the LEGO skin functions as its expressive surface, demonstrating how lightweight modular components can create monumental public landmarks. The segmented construction also reflects principles commonly used in prefabricated architecture, enabling transportation without compromising scale or detailing.

Installed in one of New York City’s busiest public spaces, the trophy operates as both an urban landmark and an interactive exhibition, inviting visitors to experience football through design rather than competition alone.

A Fan Zone Designed Around Creativity

The trophy serves as the centerpiece of the new LEGO Fan Zone at Rockefeller Plaza, open from July 6 to July 19. The activation includes collaborative brick-building experiences, personalized LEGO minifigure creation, FIFA-themed murals, interactive play stations, giveaways, and family-focused activities that encourage participation.

According to the LEGO Group, the installation reflects its ongoing partnership with FIFA, celebrating the shared values of creativity, imagination, and community through the universal language of football.

Cafu Places the Final Brick

The unveiling was led by FIFA World Cup winner Cafu, who completed the final section of the structure alongside fans representing nations still competing in the tournament.

“The FIFA World Cup Trophy is one of the most iconic symbols in sport, and seeing it recreated on this scale with LEGO bricks is truly incredible,” Cafu said during the opening ceremony, praising the craftsmanship while highlighting football’s ability to unite people across generations and cultures.

Architecture at the Scale of Play

While temporary in nature, the installation demonstrates how modular construction systems can deliver architectural impact at an urban scale. The project blurs the boundaries between sculpture, exhibition design, engineering, and placemaking, turning a globally recognized sporting icon into an accessible public experience.

In an era when cities increasingly use temporary installations to activate public spaces, LEGO’s giant FIFA World Cup Trophy illustrates how familiar materials can be reimagined through engineering precision, modular fabrication, and spatial storytelling, creating a landmark that celebrates both design and the world’s biggest sporting event.

Image credit: LEGO Group

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