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LEGO have officially released their first ever 3D-printed LEGO piece, based on one of their very first products, the iconic Wooden Duck! 

The piece will be exclusively available from The LEGO House itself as part of the Minifigure Factory experience. A very limited amount of the Ducks will be available across weekends in November, it will also be limited to one element allowed per household.

It will be available at the LEGO House for 89 DKK and requires you to book a time slot for the Minifigure Factory experience running on the below weekends:

Dates available:

  • 11-13 November
  • 18-20 November
  • 25-27 November

Please read the official details below for more in depth information.


Official details:

The LEGO® Group’s first 3D-printed element available to buy in LEGO House for a limited time

The element is a LEGO® minifigure-sized replica of the iconic wooden duck crafted by LEGO Group founder, Ole Kirk Kristiansen – and features a moveable beak!

The release is part of a pilot by the LEGO Group to gather fans’ feedback and inspire future innovation.

Available to buy from LEGO House during weekends in November only.

The LEGO House, the ‘Home of the Brick’, is offering visitors the opportunity to buy a 3D-printed LEGO minifigure-sized duck for a limited time only in November.

The duck is the first stand-alone 3D-printed element to be released by the LEGO Group. Previously, a 3D-printed element had been included in a special edition set given to participants in the 2019 LEGO Inside Tour.

Ronen Hadar, Head of the LEGO Group’s Additive Design & Manufacturing team, said: “We are excited by the possibilities of additive manufacturing and can’t wait to hear from our fans. We will use their feedback to help shape future innovation as we continue to test the limits of 3D-printing technology.”

“We’ve worked incredibly hard to make sure our 3D-printed elements meet our very strict quality, safety and durability requirements. And as for this duck, it’s gone through extra quality checks to ensure its beak smoothly opens and closes!”

Additive manufacturing or 3D printing will sit alongside injection moulding technology in the company’s factories. Injection moulding allows the company to make bricks at high speed, while the newer technology offers greater flexibility to support product innovation and, in the future, make a greater variety of elements in smaller volumes. All elements are subjected to the same quality and safety checks.

The duck element will be available exclusively in the LEGO House store as part of the Minifigure Factory experience on the following weekends:

  • 11-13 November
  • 18-20 November
  • 25-27 November

Fine print:

There’s limited availability each day during the pilot project event, and guests who wish to buy a Minifigure Factory minifigure (retail price 89 DKK) will have to sign up to purchase one. This can be done each morning on the above-mentioned dates from 9:30 a.m. when the LEGO House retail store opens, while sign-up slots last. You will pay for your Minifigure Factory box when you get your allocated time slot to make your own unique Minifigure Factory minifigure.

Everyone who purchases a duck will be asked to complete an online survey so the team can collect feedback on the element. Purchases will be restricted to one element per household.

About additive manufacturing or 3D printing

Additive manufacturing is the construction of a three-dimensional object from a digital file. It is a digital manufacturing technology covering an array of technologies that build a final product by adding material layer by layer.

Read more about LEGO House at www.LEGOHouse.com.

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Greg
Hello there, I’m Greg, the founder of The Brick Post! Please join me in appreciating all things LEGO from news and reviews to MOCs and more!

1 Comment

  1. […] total of 500 elements have been created and the entire thing is 3D printed, just like the recent LEGO Duck piece, including the spring that actually […]

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