Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010 render with integrated lighting

Spotted on Amazon UK: Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010

Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010 has appeared on Amazon UK, with Amazon France showing €89.38 and images suggesting a narrower Cyberpunk Neoncity footprint.

Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010 has appeared on Amazon UK, giving us a proper retail sighting for the next Cyberpunk Neoncity building.

The UK page is not showing live stock at the time of writing, but the listing itself is useful. Amazon France has also shown the same ASIN at €89.38, although that page is currently marked as temporarily out of stock. So this is not a clean “go and buy it now” moment yet, but it is a clearer look at where 17010 fits in the range.

The box front names the set Neon Tech Station, with set number 17010, an age mark of 16+, and a piece count of 1,282 pieces. That is not tiny, but it does look like a more compact Cyberpunk building than the larger full-footprint modules Lumibricks has shown before.

Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010 render with integrated lighting

Lumibricks Neon Tech Station 17010 Looks Narrower Than Usual

This is the part that interests me most. The Cyberpunk range has already given us big display buildings, but 17010 looks much thinner in the images. I would not call it a confirmed 16-stud or 20-stud footprint, because the listing does not give a clear base measurement, but it does not look like another 32×32-style block.

That could be a really useful move. Smaller-footprint buildings are easier to slot into a layout, easier to repeat, and easier to use as height variation between larger corner or tower models. They can also make a street feel more believable, because not every building in a city needs to occupy a full square base.

The recent Lumibricks Corner Photo Studio 19016 is a good example of why I like this direction. A compact building can still have enough character, lighting and display value to carry a shelf scene, without demanding the space of a full modular.

The Smart Power Connection Continues

The lighting is still a major part of the appeal here. The important point is that the smart power connection is not a brand-new trick for this set. Lumibricks has been building that base connection idea into its Cyberpunk buildings, and Neon Tech Station appears to continue the same system.

That matters more than it sounds. Once you start joining several lit Cyberpunk buildings together, cable management can quickly become the thing that either makes the display pleasant or turns it into a mess behind the shelf. Keeping the power connection within the base helps the theme work as a connected street, not just as separate light-up models.

Visually, the set leans hard into the usual Lumibricks Cyberpunk language: grey structural panels, cyan transparent elements, orange highlights, rooftop equipment, vertical lighting and a street-level service area. The bottom section looks like the most display-friendly part, with enough open frontage to show off the lit interior.

How It Fits the Cyberpunk Neoncity Line-up

We saw before, that the back of the box places 17010 alongside Neon Tech Tower 17011, Cyberpunk Police HQ 17009 and Police Urban Convoy 17008. That makes the role of this set clearer. It looks less like a centrepiece and more like a connecting slice of city infrastructure.

There is also a small naming wrinkle. The Amazon title and box front use Neon Tech Station, while the rear line-up appears to label 17010 as Core Tech Station. Until Lumibricks puts up its own direct product page, I would treat Neon Tech Station as the retail name and Core Tech Station as a possible internal or earlier name.

Pricing and Availability

The Amazon UK listing is live under ASIN B0H24Y7RX7, but it is currently showing as unavailable rather than giving a settled UK price. Amazon France has shown the set at €89.38, which is the best early price marker I have seen so far.

That price would make sense for a 1,282-piece Lumibricks set with integrated lighting, but I would still wait for a stable UK listing or the official Lumibricks product page before treating the final price and availability as settled.

For now, the interesting story is the shape of the set. If Neon Tech Station really is a narrower Cyberpunk module, I think that is a positive move. The big statement buildings are exciting, but these slimmer pieces are often what make a full street layout easier to build, light and rearrange.

Related reading: Lumibricks 2026 Cyberpunk roadmap recap.

Michael
Michael

Michael is the founder of The Right Brick, a dedicated news and review platform. With years of experience in the AFOL community, he provides the most in-depth, hands-on reviews for Lumibricks (Funwhole), Pantasy, and beyond.

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