LEGO House
In Billund, Denmark .
More places to visit in Billund
Discover more attractions and things to do in Billund.
Givskud Zoo
Givskud Zoo, launched in 1969 as Denmark’s first lion park, invites adventurers to drive their own cars or board guided buses through vast savanna enclosures where giraffes, white rhinos, and zebras roam inches away. In the separate walking safari , raised boardwalks cross lagoons inhabited by Nile crocodiles and islands alive with lemurs that leap overhead. The gorilla jungle shelters one of Europe’s largest bachelor troops, while the new Elephant Facility features sandbeds, mud wallows, and a 5,000-square-metre indoor hall for cold days. Children excavate fossils beside thirty-plus life-sized dinosaur models that roar and move in a forest clearing, revealing prehistory alongside present biodiversity. Keeper talks cover everything from cheetah sprints to sustainable feeding, underlining the park’s role in global conservation breeding programs for species such as the addax and giant anteater. Picnic lawns, playgrounds, and a farmyard of rare Danish breeds round out a full-day expedition that mixes close-up wildlife encounters with educational thrills.
Lalandia Billund
Lalandia Billund stretches beneath an immense glass roof as Scandinavia’s largest Aquadome , delivering tropical heat even when Danish snowflakes fall outside. Families plunge down the Tornado Racer waterslide at 70 kilometres an hour, navigate a lazy river through waving palms, and ride ocean-sized swells in the wave pool. Beyond water, the complex houses Winter World, where a refrigerated slope offers year-round indoor skiing and blue-lit ice rinks host figure-skating lessons. Sports fans can scale the Sky Trail high-ropes course, conquer a climbing wall, or compete on ten-pin lanes beneath neon galaxies. After action comes relaxation: adults soak in aromatic saunas and children roam a gigantic Monky Tonky soft-play jungle. Evening brings live shows—from magic to kids’ discos—in the Mediterranean-style plaza lined with trattorias, Tex-Mex cantinas, and Danish bakeries. Adjoining holiday cottages provide doorstep access to every activity, making Lalandia a self-contained resort village that blends watery thrills, alpine chills, and warm hospitality under one spectacular roof.
LEGOLAND Billund
LEGOLAND Billund opened its gates in 1968 beside the first LEGO factory , instantly setting the gold-standard for family theme parks built on imagination. Today its forty-plus hectares burst with themed realms such as Miniland , where more than twenty-five million bricks recreate world landmarks down to moving trains and ships. Thrill-seekers tackle the high-speed Polar X-plorer coaster with a five-metre drop into an icy crevasse, then cool off on the Vikings River Splash or race lasers inside LEGO Ninjago World . Younger builders design digital fish that swim in an interactive aquarium or pilot mini planes above Duplo Valley. Throughout the day costumed performers stage pirate battles on the lagoon and 4D cinema shorts shower the audience with wind and water. Creative workshops let guests program robots or master advanced brick-building techniques, and restaurants serve meals shaped—of course—like coloured bricks. From spring fireworks to winter brick-light festivals, LEGOLAND Billund remains the flagship park where timeless play meets cutting-edge rides, inspiring millions of return pilgrimages every year.
Sculpture Park Billund
Sculpture Park Billund threads a tranquil green corridor between the LEGO House and LEGOLAND, showcasing more than twenty contemporary installations by artists from Denmark, Japan, Spain, and beyond. Curved steel ribbons appear to flutter like paper; polished granite bears reflect sunlight across lily ponds; and a towering LEGO DNA helix pays playful homage to the town’s heritage. Informative plaques reveal each artist’s concept, encouraging slow contemplation along the one-kilometre path bordered by birch groves and wildflowers. Seasonal events transform the space: summer jazz echoing among abstract forms, autumn lantern walks illuminating tactile surfaces, and winter ice-sculpture workshops attracting budding creatives. Benches carved from storm-felled oak invite quiet reflection, while interactive pieces respond to touch or wind, merging art and environment. Maintained by local volunteers and funded through public art grants, the park champions accessibility—entry is free year-round—making it an open-air gallery without walls where residents and travellers can picnic, sketch, or simply breathe in Billund’s innovative spirit.