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Brutalism: page 9

  • Preston Bus Station youth centre proposal 1

    Youth centre proposals shortlisted for Brutalist Preston Bus Station refurbishment

    The Royal Institute of British Architects has revealed five possible designs for a youth centre that will form part of the £23 million redevelopment of Preston's Brutalist bus station, which was recently saved from demolition (+ slideshow). More about Youth centre proposals shortlisted for Brutalist Preston Bus Station refurbishment

    Jessica Mairs | 17 July 2015 | 9 comments
  • Owen Hatherley on Fun, Brutalism, Pomo and the Soutbank Centre

    "The real problem with all this Fun is that it isn't really very funny"

    Opinion: twisting slides, a hotel room shaped like a boat and a pop-up theatre are among the "fun" recent additions to London's Brutalist Southbank Centre. Has Owen Hatherley lost his sense of humour or is there something more sinister in all these layers of entertainment? More about "The real problem with all this Fun is that it isn't really very funny"

    Owen Hatherley | 14 July 2015 | 4 comments
  • Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

    Richard Rogers calls for architects to help save "exceptional" Robin Hood Gardens

    Architect Richard Rogers has urged the architectural community to support the preservation of the Brutalist Robin Hood Gardens estate, which he has described as post-war Britain's most important social housing development. More about Richard Rogers calls for architects to help save "exceptional" Robin Hood Gardens

    Amy Frearson | 18 June 2015 | 9 comments
  • Assemble's Brutalist Playground is a climbable landscape of ice-cream-coloured shapes

    London Festival of Architecture 2015: Turner Prize-nominated architecture collective Assemble has teamed up with British artist Simon Terrill to create full-size foam replicas of playground designs from architecture's Brutalist era (+ slideshow). More about Assemble's Brutalist Playground is a climbable landscape of ice-cream-coloured shapes

    Anna Winston | 9 June 2015 | 5 comments
  • Brutalist playground installation at the RIBA by Assemble

    Assemble to fill RIBA gallery with Brutalist Playground

    London Festival of Architecture 2015:  Turner-nominated architecture studio Assemble has revealed plans to fill a gallery in the headquarters of the Royal Institute of British Architects with a spongy Brutalist-inspired landscape. More about Assemble to fill RIBA gallery with Brutalist Playground

    Anna Winston | 21 May 2015 | Leave a comment
  • Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

    Last-ditch bid launched to save Robin Hood Gardens from demolition

    A high-profile campaign to save the Brutalist Robin Hood Gardens housing estate in London has been revived. More about Last-ditch bid launched to save Robin Hood Gardens from demolition

    Amy Frearson | 17 March 2015 | 14 comments
  • Preston Bus Station

    Competition launched to create youth centre inside Preston's Brutalist bus station

    News: an international design competition has been launched to create a "state-of-the-art facility for young people" inside Preston Bus Station, an iconic Brutalist building in Lancashire, England. More about Competition launched to create youth centre inside Preston's Brutalist bus station

    Anna Winston | 27 February 2015 | 1 comment
  • Omi Palone video by Simon Marsham

    London's Brutalist landmarks star in Omi Palone music video

    Music: a selection of the UK capital's most prominent Brutalist buildings are featured in the video for post-punk band Omi Palone's track Architecture. More about London's Brutalist landmarks star in Omi Palone music video

    Sammy Nikdel | 17 January 2015 | 2 comments
  • Habitat 67 by Moshe Safdie

    Moshe Safdie used "all the Lego in Montreal" to design Habitat 67

    Movie: in the second interview from our exclusive series, AIA 2015 Gold Medallist architect Moshe Safdie explains how he used Lego to design the groundbreaking Habitat 67 housing development. More about Moshe Safdie used "all the Lego in Montreal" to design Habitat 67

    Anna Winston | 19 December 2014 | Leave a comment
  • St Peter's Seminary in Cardross by Gillespie Kidd & Coia

    Brutalist seminary to be resurrected in 2015 after 25 years of neglect

    News: after a quarter of a century of decay, a full design team has been appointed to convert the Brutalist ruins of Gillespie, Kidd & Coia's St Peter's Seminary in Cardross, Scotland, into a major venue for art and culture. More about Brutalist seminary to be resurrected in 2015 after 25 years of neglect

    Amy Frearson | 24 November 2014 | 3 comments
  • National Theatre by Denys Lasdun

    Brutalist buildings: National Theatre, London by Denys Lasdun

    Brutalism: Denys Lasdun's National Theatre – one of London's best-known and most divisive Brutalist buildings – is a layered concrete landscape that Prince Charles once described as being like "a nuclear power station". More about Brutalist buildings: National Theatre, London by Denys Lasdun

    Olivia Mull | 6 October 2014 | 5 comments
  • Prentice Women's Hospital by Bertrand Goldberg & Associates

    Brutalist buildings: Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago by Bertrand Goldberg & Associates

    Brutalism: the design for the clover-shaped tower of Bertrand Goldberg's Prentice Women's Hospital in Chicago was enabled by the pioneering application of one of the earliest three-dimensional modelling programmes. With its curving form, Goldberg made a clear break away from the grid formations favoured in Modernist architecture. More about Brutalist buildings: Prentice Women's Hospital, Chicago by Bertrand Goldberg & Associates

    Jessica Mairs | 2 October 2014 | 5 comments
  • Yale Building by Paul Rudolph

    Brutalist buildings: Yale Art and Architecture Building, Connecticut by Paul Rudolph

    Brutalism: one of the earliest known examples of Brutalist architecture in America is Paul Rudolph's Yale Art and Architecture Building in New Haven, Connecticut, an imposing, fortress-like building that juxtaposes masses of textured concrete with layers of steel-framed glazing. More about Brutalist buildings: Yale Art and Architecture Building, Connecticut by Paul Rudolph

    Jessica Mairs | 26 September 2014 | 8 comments
  • Balfron Tower by Ernö Goldfinger

    Brutalist buildings: Balfron Tower, London by Ernö Goldfinger

    Brutalism: a 27-storey slab block is next up in our Brutalist buildings series. As the precursor to the larger and more famous Trellick Tower, Ernö Goldfinger's Balfron Tower in east London was a testbed for the architect's utopian housing ideals (+ slideshow). More about Brutalist buildings: Balfron Tower, London by Ernö Goldfinger

    Amy Frearson | 24 September 2014 | 28 comments
  • Hayward collection by Custhom

    Custhom launches Hayward textile as tribute to Brutalist classic

    London Design Festival 2014: Custhom has created a new upholstery textile based on the variety of forms found in the architecture of the Hayward Gallery on London's Southbank (+ movie). More about Custhom launches Hayward textile as tribute to Brutalist classic

    Anna Winston | 23 September 2014 | 1 comment
  • Aula TU Delft by Van den Broek en Bakema

    Architects pick their favourite Brutalist buildings

    Brutalism: as part of our ongoing series on Brutalism, we asked architects including Kengo Kuma, David Adjaye and Amanda Levete to reveal their favourite buildings from the radical post-war movement. More about Architects pick their favourite Brutalist buildings

    Anna Winston | 19 September 2014 | 14 comments
  • Brutalist buildings: Pilgrimage Church, Neviges by Gottfried Böhm

    Brutalism: one of the most revered religious buildings of the Brutalist period is Gottfried Böhm's Church of the Pilgrimage in Neviges, the crystalline structure that abandoned traditional Catholic architecture in favour of sharp angles and rough concrete (+ slideshow). More about Brutalist buildings: Pilgrimage Church, Neviges by Gottfried Böhm

    Amy Frearson | 17 September 2014 | 6 comments
  • Competition: win a bundle of five photobooks on Brutalist buildings

    Competition: to coincide with the Brutalism series on Dezeen, we've teamed up with UK publisher Café Royal Books to give away a bundle of photography books featuring buildings including Trellick Tower and Preston Bus Station. More about Competition: win a bundle of five photobooks on Brutalist buildings

    Ray Murphy | 17 September 2014 | Leave a comment
  • Unité d'Habitation by Le Corbusier

    Brutalist buildings: Unité d'Habitation, Marseille by Le Corbusier

    Brutalism: Le Corbusier's first Unité d'Habitation is arguably the most influential Brutalist building of all time. With its human proportions, chunky pilotis and interior "streets", it redefined high-density housing by reimagining a city inside an 18-storey slab block. More about Brutalist buildings: Unité d'Habitation, Marseille by Le Corbusier

    Amy Frearson | 15 September 2014 | 16 comments
  • Yoyogi National Gymnasium by Kenzō Tange

    "There was good brutalism and bad, but even the bad was done in earnest"

    Brutalism: challenging, idealistic and serious – Brutalism is architecture for grown ups, says Jonathan Meades. More about "There was good brutalism and bad, but even the bad was done in earnest"

    Jonathan Meades | 15 September 2014 | 8 comments
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Rosa María House by Delavegacanolasso

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"Quietly magical" Toronto cafe provides family-friendly third place

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