With three Golden Globes under its belt already and 10 Oscar nominations, The Brutalist ... mocked and voted London’s ugliest tall building in a poll run by New London Architecture as recently ...
Brutalist architecture ... the Barbican in London epitomizes brutalist urban planning. The massive residential and cultural complex includes housing, theaters, concert halls and public spaces.
In the former Yugoslavia, for example, Brutalist architects created residential blocks and hotels ... centers built in the Brutalist style, from London's Barbican Centre to Brisbane's Queensland ...
Some are fascinated by ... have varied. London's Robin Hood Gardens, a 1970s housing estate designed by architects Alison and Peter Smithson, was demolished starting in 2017. The residential ...
By the Sixties and Seventies, brutalism began to be used as a broader term to describe architecture characterised by monolithic concrete forms with an imposing or monumental appearance.
Explore these jaw-dropping vintage images of British homes through the ages. From the earliest archive images of a country ...
The Brutalist won a trio ... or Ernő Goldfinger in London (whose Trellick and Balfron Towers better exemplify the social concerns of the era's architects). The building here, perched on its ...
But the film has drawn scorn from design experts, who accuse it of glaring errors, and question whether its main character is even a Brutalist architect. Here are five things to know about the ...
As “The Brutalist” heads into Oscar night with 10 nominations, Hollywood is clamoring for its next big architecture hit. Our illustrator has some ideas. By Michael Lukk Litwak Viewership ...
In various outlets, the debate has resurged over the human effects of brutalism, the imposing concrete style that possessed architects from the early 1950s to the late 1970s but alienated more of ...
Built in a Brutalist style, Balfron Tower is an old council housing block in East London (Picture: Getty Images) Ladbroke Grove’s Trellick Tower’s imposing architecture can be quite polarising ...