SNACK three-line summary
- LEGO Korea’s official product page has listed Hubble Space Telescope 11382.
- It is an 18+ set with 1,252 pieces, priced in Korea at KRW 204,900, and officially marked as scheduled for release on August 1, 2026.
- It is an adult space display set with removable outer panels, an internal equipment bay, an opening aperture door, and a stand with an information plaque.

Snackgirls editor note
AIKO: “On the Korean official page, we confirmed 11382, 1,252 pieces, KRW 204,900, and a scheduled release date of August 1, 2026.”
Kirari: “With the solar panels and stand, it should look like a proper display piece as soon as you set it on a bookshelf. The photos showing the opening internal equipment bay are pretty exciting too.”
Today’s 12:10 KST LEGO and hobby scout highlight is LEGO Icons Hubble Space Telescope 11382. With LEGO Korea’s official product page now live, the domestic price and planned release date have been confirmed together, and there are enough official images to use in the article. The key point is that this is not just a space-themed decorative build, but an adult display model that uses removable outer panels to reveal the internal equipment bay.
The official Korea numbers are 18+, 1,252 pieces, and KRW 204,900
LEGO Korea’s official page lists this product as set number 11382 in the LEGO® Icons theme. The basic information is 18+, 1,252 pieces, a Korea price of KRW 204,900, and a scheduled release date of August 1, 2026.
The important part is that this is not a stage where only overseas pricing has surfaced first. The Korean official product page shows the domestic price and planned release date together. For readers who collect large space and NASA-related display sets, it is already in a state where it can go straight onto the budget list.

Remove the outer panels to see the equipment bay and mirror structure
The strongest point in the official description is the removable outer panels. When the panels are taken off, the internal equipment bay appears, depicting elements such as gyroscopes, the primary mirror, and the secondary mirror. It gives the finished model another display feature worth opening up and looking at.
The solar panels and antennas can also be moved, and the aperture door can be opened. Rather than stopping at a simple space telescope silhouette, the set is closer to a compact way of experiencing the feel of real observation equipment.

The stand, information plaque, and astronaut minifigure support the display feel
The set includes a dedicated stand and information plaque, along with an astronaut minifigure for scale. The officially listed dimensions, with the aperture door open, are about 32 cm high and about 38 cm long and wide.
At that size, it is closer to a display piece that properly occupies one shelf than a small desk ornament. If you already own NASA Artemis or Space Shuttle-series sets, it should be easy to group this into the same space display lineup.

Before the August 1 release, keep watching the Korea page status
As of the current check, the product is in scheduled for release status. That means the actual purchase button, stock status, and any gift-with-purchase eligibility are worth checking again around the release date.
Even so, this news is strong enough to stand on its own. The domestic official price, release date, identity as an adult space display set, and official images showing the internal structure have all been locked in. It is best read as a new-product alert for deciding whether to clear space and budget first, even before deciding whether to buy it.

Sources and checked date: Checked on July 10, 2026 at 12:10 KST
- https://www.lego.com/ko-kr/product/hubble-space-telescope-11382
- https://www.lego.com/en-us/product/hubble-space-telescope-11382
- https://brickset.com/article/133087
- https://jaysbrickblog.com/news/lego-11382-hubble-space-telescope-celebrates-35th-anniversary-of-iconic-space-based-observatory/
- https://www.thebrickfan.com/lego-icons-hubble-space-telescope-11382-officially-announced/
On LEGO Korea’s official product page, we checked the domestic price, scheduled release date, piece count, target age, set features, and official images. LEGO’s official U.S. page was checked for comparison against the detailed description, while Brickset, Jay’s Brick Blog, and The Brick Fan were used only as specialist sources for the July 9, 2026 reveal signal and context.
Leave a comment