Lego

Order your food with lego bricks

HiQ creates a unique experience at LEGO® House

It’s fun and it’s an exciting process for children to watch – but the project is, of course, about more than simply ordering food.

Dream mission

Order your food with LEGO bricks – and have it delivered by dancing robots! Thanks to a highly creative collaboration between the LEGO Group and HiQ, the family’s meal at LEGO House in Billund, Denmark, really is something out of the ordinary!

“A dream assignment”

Simona Bamerlind, Managing Director of HiQ Gothenburg.

Digiphysical experience

LEGO House is the latest addition to the Billund skyline in Denmark, a gigantic LEGO building filled with 25 million LEGO bricks and creative, educational fun and games for LEGO fans of all ages. But to unleash your greatest talents for building and playing, you need fuel in the form of food in your tummy. And now the entire food experience – conceived and constructed by HiQ – reflects the true LEGO spirit.
“We have created a digiphysical play experience for the family restaurant that involves visitors in the process of composing their food order with the help of LEGO bricks,” says Simona Bamerlind.

Learning game

Every component of the meal is represented by a specific LEGO brick, and when the full meal order has been composed, diners slide their tray into a hatch that leads directly into the world of LEGO. Then you can follow on screen as LEGO figures interpret the children’s order, prepare the food and place it in a meal box. Meal boxes are then transported on a conveyor belt from the kitchen to two LEGO robots who hand out the orders to the waiting guests.

It’s fun and it’s an exciting process for children to watch – but the project is, of course, about more than simply ordering food. The LEGO group sought HiQ’s help to create a unique and magical experience that builds on the LEGO brand values of creativity, fun and learning.“That’s right. It’s all about a return to the roots of LEGO. The third generation of the Kirk Kristiansen family that founded the LEGO business wanted visitors to rediscover the pure pleasure of playing. So now we are linking today’s digital technology into what is otherwise very much an analog environment” says Cari Johansson, who is responsible at HiQ for delivering the project.


“The entire project has been characterised by an agile working approach close to our target group – not only families with children in the 4–12 age group, but also restaurant staff. This serves as a good example of how we can use our in-depth technical know-how to produce something truly creative. It has made this a very special project indeed.”

We are linking today’s digital technology into what is otherwise very much an analog environment.

Cari Johansson, Delivery manager for the project, HiQ

Great collaboration

The concept phase was carried out in close collaboration with the Gothenburg company Stylt Trampoli, which are experts in restaurant concepts and interior design. HiQ has been a turnkey contractor for nine subcontractors that span everything from automation, robots and payment systems to animation and music. The restaurant is praised in the media and by fans, and parts of the solution have been patented by LEGO House together with HiQ. Now, after five years in operation and over 1 million served guests, we can call Lego House nothing but a success story.

Magic boxes: At Mini Chef, the Lego men prepare the food and take orders in the Lego language. Guests put their builds into the box and have them interpreted into dishes by a magical machine.
© Erik Nissen Johansen / Stylt Trampoli AB