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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.
unrefined aesthetic of brutalism with a focus on environmental sustainability,' explains London-based architect Graham Ford. 'It's an architectural style that emphasises the use of natural ...
A new London house ... loosely be termed neo-Brutalism, not only through the refined juxtaposition of brick, timber, terracotta and, on occasion, concrete, but also the social idealism that ...
The Barbican Estate in the City of London, known for its brutalist architecture, was built on ground devastated by World War II bombing by the Nazis. Residents of the estate - in the heart of the ...
The structures, if not the materials, are being reproduced in more Health and Safety-friendly pastel foam at the home of the Royal Institute of British Architects ... London’s most iconic ...
The twentieth century marked a definitive shift in the realm of architecture, as the Modernist movement broke from traditional building styles and encouraged experimentation and innovation.
the London estate which was both lauded as a masterpiece of modernist social housing and condemned as a ‘concrete monstrosity’ before its recent demolition. Pioneering British architects Alison and ...
explore the brutalist London landmark’s new chapter Space House, a landmark of brutalist architecture by Richard Seifert & Partners in London’s Covent Garden, is back following a 21st-century redesign ...