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LEGO Icons 10350 Tudor Corner looks exactly like the kind of release the Modular Buildings Collection is supposed to deliver: a richly detailed street-corner model with a clear architectural identity, layered interiors and enough character to reward long display life after the build is finished. Based on the official LEGO product page and official LEGO images, this 3,266-piece set combines three brick-and-timber-style facades, a restaurant, a haberdasher’s, a clockmaker’s workshop and an attic flat into one densely packed adult display model. With 8 minifigures and a price of €229.99, it sits in premium territory, but it also appears to offer the kind of depth, storytelling potential and visual variety that modular fans usually expect when LEGO gets this format right.
This review is based on official LEGO information and official LEGO imagery currently available on LEGO.com, not on hands-on building experience. Even with that limitation, there is enough verified material here to judge the set’s design priorities, display strengths and likely value for the adult audience it is clearly targeting.

LEGO 10350 quick facts
- Set name: Tudor Corner
- Set number: 10350
- Theme: LEGO Icons
- Collection: Modular Buildings Collection
- Age rating: 18+
- Piece count: 3,266
- Price: €229.99
- Availability: Available now on LEGO.com
- Minifigures: 8
- Dimensions: over 31 cm high, 26 cm wide and 25 cm deep
That specification puts 10350 in familiar modular territory: a large adult-oriented corner building with a serious piece count, a premium price and a strong emphasis on display presence rather than play-led gimmicks. The more important question is whether the design itself feels special enough to stand alongside the best entries in the line.
Why the Tudor style gives this set a real identity
The strongest thing about Tudor Corner, at least on official evidence, is that it does not look like a generic city building with a historical label pasted onto it. LEGO is leaning hard into the black timber framing, varied windows, steep red roof and rustic chimney stacks, and that is exactly what the set needs. A modular stands out when its silhouette and facade treatment are recognizable from across the room, and 10350 seems to understand that.
That architectural focus matters because modulars compete as much on personality as on raw size. A model can be technically impressive and still feel anonymous if the frontage is too flat or too polite. Tudor Corner avoids that problem. The angles, textures and uneven old-world character all help it read as a specific place rather than just another upscale corner unit.

The interior mix looks like a major strength
Official LEGO copy highlights a restaurant, a haberdasher’s, a clockmaker’s workshop and an attic flat, which is a promising combination. Good modulars need more than an attractive exterior; they need interior spaces that feel distinct from one another and justify lifting the floors apart. Tudor Corner seems particularly strong on that front because each space has its own logic and mood.
The restaurant gives the building a public-facing ground-floor anchor, while the hat-and-umbrella shop adds a charmingly specific bit of retail character that feels less predictable than another bakery or café. The clockmaker’s workshop is probably the most interesting room in the set conceptually, because it suggests a denser concentration of small object detail, while the attic flat adds the lived-in top-floor element that helps modulars feel like complete miniature worlds.
LEGO also says the room sections can be rearranged thanks to the modular design. That is not a revolutionary feature in this collection, but it does reinforce the idea that 10350 is built for owners who enjoy revisiting and redisplaying their sets rather than placing them once and forgetting them.

What LEGO 10350 gets right straight away
Several positives stand out from the official material alone. First, the set has a clear architectural point of view. Second, the interior programme is more imaginative than average. Third, the minifigure count is healthy enough to support the storytelling without becoming the main sales pitch.
Most importantly, the model seems balanced. Some modulars are facade-driven but shallow once opened up. Others pack in interior detail but look a bit plain from the street. Tudor Corner appears to offer both exterior character and internal variety, which is exactly what makes this line compelling to long-term collectors.
- Pros
- The Tudor architecture gives the building a distinctive look that should stand out immediately in any modular line-up.
- The mix of restaurant, haberdasher’s, clockmaker’s workshop and attic flat feels varied and unusually characterful.
- Eight minifigures is a solid number for a display-led adult set and should help the scene feel populated.
- The corner-building format naturally improves shelf presence and street-layout flexibility.
- The official images suggest excellent texture through timber framing, roof shaping and window variation.

Where Tudor Corner may feel less convincing
The biggest reservation is price, because €229.99 remains a serious ask even in the context of adult LEGO. The piece count is strong and the design looks ambitious, but modular buyers are still entitled to compare this with older entries that offered similar shelf impact at lower prices. That does not automatically make Tudor Corner poor value, but it does raise the threshold for what the set needs to deliver.
There is also a taste factor here. Tudor-inspired architecture is more decorative and more specific than the cleaner urban styling of some modulars. For many collectors, that will be the whole appeal. For others, it may make the model slightly harder to integrate into a realistic city layout unless the surrounding street already supports a more stylized historical look.
- Cons
- The premium price will inevitably narrow the audience, even among dedicated modular fans.
- The heavily themed Tudor styling may not blend as naturally with every existing modular street.
- The set appears display-first, so buyers looking for extensive mechanical functions may find it relatively straightforward.
- Its success depends on how much you personally value architectural atmosphere over broader play versatility.

How it should fit into the Modular Buildings Collection
One of the best signs for 10350 is that it does not seem to rely on novelty alone. Instead, it looks like a set that understands the long-running strengths of the Modular Buildings Collection: architectural identity, layered interiors, display flexibility and a sense of urban storytelling. Corner builds already carry extra presence because they can terminate a row, anchor a junction or simply break up a street visually, and Tudor Corner appears to use that advantage well.
The set also seems likely to reward close viewing. Clocks, hats, umbrellas, restaurant furniture and domestic attic details are exactly the kind of secondary touches that give modulars a longer life in a collection. They make the model worth revisiting. That matters more than headline size once the build is complete.
Final verdict
On current official evidence, LEGO Icons 10350 Tudor Corner looks like one of the more characterful modular-style releases in recent memory. The facade has a clear identity, the interior line-up is stronger than usual, and the corner format gives the whole model a natural display advantage. The price is substantial, and not every collector will want such a historically stylized building in their street.
Still, if you want a modular that appears rich in atmosphere rather than merely large, Tudor Corner looks very convincing. It seems to understand that the best adult display sets are not just impressive on paper. They also need personality, and 10350 appears to have that in abundance.
See the set on the official LEGO product page for the latest official pricing and availability.