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Lego: Harry Potter's Diagon Alley Shops

  • Writer: Coty
    Coty
  • Oct 31
  • 2 min read

Some people book spa weekends. We booked a getaway to play board games and relive our childhood. Three of us returned to the wizarding world they grew up with. I, the latecomer, had recently finished the books. Our destination? An area big enough for four adults, loads of LEGO bags, and one very long Diagon Alley

Diagon Alley picture from Zatu

There were enough instruction manuals to keep us from hexing each other. This was not just a build. It was a full-on weekend at Ollivanders, a trip to the Weasleys’ joke shop, and a ride with the knight bus. It was building magic, brick by brick


The Basics

  • Set: 76444 LEGO Harry Potter – Diagon Alley Wizarding Shop

  • Pieces: 2,750

  • Size: 6 in. (15 cm) high, 34 in. (88 cm) wide, 3 in. (8 cm) deep if stretched out. If folded, the layout is 18 in. (45 cm) by 2 in. (16 cm)

  • Characters: 12 and the Knight Bus!


The Masterpiece

This build is made for teamwork. I love that the instructions are split into multiple manuals. Everyone got their own section, their own pile of bricks, and nobody had to battle for page turns. We put the movies on in the background and built in peace. No elbows thrown. No spells cast. Just quiet concentration and the satisfying click of tiny plastic magic.

The design and build is clever. Like Fred-and-George-level clever. Every detail pulls you deeper into the wizarding world. There are five sections in total. Gringotts is at the center, complete with a fiery dragon perched on top like the dramatic guardian it is


I’ve been to Universal Orlando and life size Diagon Alley, craning my neck up at the fire-breathing dragon. But building it after finishing the books? That hit was different. Suddenly every little corner meant something. I love that the shopfronts open up, the light posts glow with charm, and the interiors are actually visible, which makes arranging the characters feel like staging a little play


The hat in Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes is a personal favorite, and I may have spent too long deciding exactly where to place Ron, Fred, Hermione, Ginny, Draco, and the rest. It’s surprisingly satisfying to build a world you can actually curate. The design is smart, modular, and packed with personality. It doesn’t just look good. It feels magical


Final Impression

When it’s done, Diagon Alley looks absolutely sick. It’s tidy! The wizarding street is ready to live on a shelf. If you open it up, the magic spills out. Each shop is inviting, every place has a story, and the dragon sits perched at the center watching over all of it and everyone. I’m picturing the holidays. I’ll need to add little Christmas trees to ensure Diagon Alley is festive. I really enjoyed building this set with friends. Building it was magical!

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