Despite a banger of a Formula 1 Grand Prix in Miami this past Sunday (the first half, at least), the real highlight of the weekend may just have been the race before the race. No, I’m not talking ...
It took 22,000 hours and 4 million bricks to make the vehicles.
Formula 1 Drivers’ parades can be humdrum encounters but on Sunday in Miami the field of 20 were like wide-eyed kids. That’s because Formula 1’s partner Lego delivered 10 life-sized cars that they ...
Lego has built 10 life-sized Formula 1 cars with nearly 400,000 pieces each, a major attraction at the 2025 Formula One Miami ...
MIAMI, May 4 (Reuters) - Formula One's 20 drivers carried out a novel brick test when they took to the track in life-size two-seater cars made of Lego for a parade like no other ahead of Sunday’s ...
Formula 1 continues to come up with inventive ways of building up its American fanbase as it replaced the traditional driver parade truck for the Miami Grand Prix with bespoke LEGO cars. Each team has ...
We’re not quite sure what the Lego engineers expected when they gave the F1 grid 10 full-sized replicas to drive around on the Miami GP parade lap. With over 22,000 hours spent building the blocky ...
Miami got its first F1 rain race and a double podium for McLaren during this weekend’s Grand Prix, but the real highlight of the weekend came during the Drivers’ Parade, when Lego amazed spectators ...
Generally, before an F1 event, drivers enter the track on a flatbed truck, where they drive slowly waving at fans. On Sunday, before the 2025 Miami Grand Prix, the entrance was a bit flashier. Drivers ...