
If you’ve ever stared at your bookshelf and thought “something’s missing,” the answer might just be 1,359 bricks and a deerstalker hat. LEGO’s newest entry in its Icons line, the Sherlock Holmes: Book Nook (set #10351), is the kind of thing that makes you stop and look twice. It’s a fully detailed slice of Victorian Baker Street that folds up slim enough to slip between your novels like it was always meant to be there.
Sherlock Holmes is arguably the most iconic fictional detective ever created. Arthur Conan Doyle first introduced him to the world in 1887, and the character has never really left the cultural spotlight since. Books, films, BBC adaptations, podcasts. The man in the deerstalker hat has shown up in just about every medium imaginable. And yet, despite LEGO spending decades immortalizing everything from Hogwarts to the Millennium Falcon, Holmes somehow never got his own set. That changes with this release, and it feels long overdue.
Designer: LEGO

The Sherlock Holmes: Book Nook is LEGO’s first-ever official Sherlock Holmes set and is priced at $129.99. Part of the LEGO Icons lineup and rated for adults 18 and up, it also introduces the brand’s new Book Nook format: a concept built around the idea that a LEGO display doesn’t have to dominate a room. It can quietly live on your shelf instead.


Book nooks as a category have been a niche collector’s obsession for years, with independent artists crafting tiny lit worlds to slip between volumes on a shelf. LEGO entering that space makes a lot of sense, and they’ve done it with their typical level of attention to detail.


When folded shut, the set presents a flat, bookend-style exterior decorated with a tiled black silhouette of Holmes against a tan background. It’s clean, intentional, and designed to sit comfortably alongside an actual Sherlock Holmes collection without looking out of place. That kind of restraint in presentation is a smart design call. But unfold it, and that’s where things get genuinely impressive.


The opened build stretches to 14.5 inches wide and just over 8 inches tall, revealing a Baker Street facade split across two distinct sides. One side gives you a bookshop with a revolving display window. The other is a shadowy terraced residence with a sliding front door. Turn a dial and the door rises to expose Professor Moriarty’s hideout tucked just behind it. It’s a small mechanical touch that delivers quite a lot of atmosphere in a tight space.


Flip open the facade of 221B Baker Street and you’re looking directly into Sherlock’s apartment in miniature: a brick-built fireplace, a clue board pinned with evidence, and his beloved violin. The storytelling packed into a build just 2.5 inches deep is genuinely impressive. Outside, a cobbled walkway runs along the base, giving the whole thing the same street-level texture that fans of LEGO’s Diagon Alley sets will immediately recognize.


Five exclusive minifigures complete the package: Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, Irene Adler, Professor Moriarty, and a newcomer named Paige. All five are brand new to LEGO, which alone makes this a collector’s milestone. The lineup covers the key players well. You get the detective, his loyal companion, his greatest adversary, the woman who outsmarted him, and a fresh Baker Street face.


What makes the Book Nook format feel like such a smart direction for LEGO’s adult lineup is how it collapses the gap between collectible and functional object. There’s no dedicated display case required, no plinth, no cleared shelf space. You slide it between your books, and it lives there quietly until a guest spots it and can’t stop staring. It’s designed to be discovered, not displayed. LEGO is releasing two more Book Nooks alongside this one, a Lord of the Rings and a Harry Potter edition, signaling a real commitment to the format.


The Sherlock Holmes Book Nook is available now on LEGO.com and at Barnes & Noble for $129.99. Whether you’re a Conan Doyle devotee, a design enthusiast, or just someone whose shelf could use a little mystery, this one is worth a closer look.


The post LEGO Finally Built the $130 Sherlock Holmes Set Fans Needed first appeared on Yanko Design.



















