Brutalist architecture, known for its raw concrete, geometric forms and imposing presence, has gained a renewed interest in the modern age of social media and more recently through the film The ...
Culture is a vulture. In the architecture world, it's all about the re-appreciation of brutalism. The revival has been relatively swift—the verdict swinging from condemnation and demolition to ...
Architects debate the merits of preserving D.C.'s Brutalist landmarks as the federal government considers selling off ...
From The Fall to Joy Division, we have curated a list of the five greatest songs about brutalism and brutalist architecture.
A recent MAGA order hopes to step away from Brutalist architecture that dominates the design of so many government buildings across the nation . . . There's an interesting debate over this mandate ...
As a part of GW’s expansion of the Foggy Bottom Campus during the 1970s, the architecture firm Mills, Petticord and Mills ...
Harry Weese’s stations for Washington’s Metro subway system are vaulted spaces with coffer-like rectangular recesses meant to harmonize with Washington’s classical architecture. Not exactly what you’d ...
The Brutalist won a trio of Oscars last night, but it failed to say anything meaningful about architecture, writes Edwin Heathcote. The Brutalist tries hard to be an epic movie. And how often do ...
It’s less brutalist — a style that exploits the ... The film concludes with Tóth lauded as a hero at architecture’s Venice Biennale, an unflinching visionary who overcame a materialistic ...
Richard Mille channels the raw, angular beauty of Brutalism—reinterpreting it through the lens of high watchmaking.