The LEGO® Korean Tea House Seonbi-Won has poured its way into the 10K Club and is now being reviewed for production. By mid-2026, we’ll know if this quiet masterpiece joins LEGO®’s cultural lineup. Created by The_Limit_ts_kang, it’s a love letter to Korea’s Hannok architecture, where every curved roof and muted color carries centuries of design wisdom.

The Grace of Hannok in Miniature
To understand Seonbi-Won, start with the Hannok. These traditional Korean buildings are defined by their curved blue roofs, green beams, and symmetry that feels almost meditative.

This LEGO® build captures that same sense of balance. From the dark roof tiles to the gentle slope of each edge, every detail respects the geometry of calm. It’s not unlike LEGO®’s Himeji Castle (21060) or Japanese Garden (10315), sets that turn cultural heritage into tactile peace. Yet Seonbi-Won stands apart in tone and details.

A Modern Tea House with Ancient Roots
The builder’s inspiration came during a trip to Jeju Island, where he discovered Hannok homes repurposed as tea houses. One in particular, named Seonbi-Won, fused history with hospitality. Its name translates to “a forum of Seonbi,” referring to scholars of integrity and wisdom who lived by principle, not profit.

Inside the LEGO® version, a barista minifigure serves Korean tea and fresh coffee. A pond, citrus tree, and open courtyard invite quiet reflection. Even pets are welcome. It’s the kind of place where you can imagine minifigures discussing poetry over dessert while the light shifts through lattice windows.



A Cultural Moment in LEGO® Form
If LEGO® approves Seonbi-Won in its 2026 review, it could mark a new moment for East Asian representation in the LEGO® Ideas lineup. Beyond its beauty, it offers something else rare: stillness. It’s a set that celebrates patience, design discipline, and the simple luxury of tea in the middle of noise.


For now, fans wait. The way one waits for tea to steep or cherry blossoms to bloom.