Why everyone hates this concrete building

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  • čas přidán 5. 11. 2023
  • And why brutalism dominates US college campuses.
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    When you look at college campuses across the US, you’ll see massive concrete buildings everywhere. Many of these are designed in a style of architecture called "brutalism," and it's as divisive as it is distinctive.
    Brutalist buildings strive for honesty and transparency in their form and materials. This often means using simple materials like raw untreated concrete as well as using bold geometry.
    Its origins can be traced back to the architect Le Corbusier, who pioneered many of the concepts that would become popular amongst brutalist architects.
    Brutalism found its way onto college campuses in the wake of World War II. With veterans returning from the war and a baby boom in the US, campuses expanded their facilities to accommodate the growing enrollment. And they wanted to convey their ambition and progressiveness by utilizing these modernist styles.
    But as is explored in the video above, these buildings weren't always popular with the public. And they became less so as time went on. We look at Evans Hall at UC Berkeley, which some people view as the ugliest building on campus and whose future hangs in the balance of shifting tastes in architecture. So what does the future hold for these buildings?
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @Vox
    @Vox  Před 6 měsíci +148

    What’s the infamous brutalist building on your college campus? Let us know in the comments below 👇

    • @Splucked
      @Splucked Před 6 měsíci

      Our monstrosity isn't a college bldg. It's Boston City Hall. FUGLY FUGLY FUGLY.

    • @liamastill6733
      @liamastill6733 Před 6 měsíci +21

      Edinburgh University Main Library. The university knocked down 75% of the Georgian townhouses around a beautiful garden square and replaced them with enormous brutalist constructs.

    • @LightAndSportyGuy
      @LightAndSportyGuy Před 6 měsíci +4

      Buell building at Lawrence Technological University - looks like it belongs on the Maginot line...

    • @jlim0316
      @jlim0316 Před 6 měsíci +11

      Sci-li at Brown❤

    • @edgarpio472
      @edgarpio472 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Bobst Library - NYU

  • @spicytuna62
    @spicytuna62 Před 6 měsíci +211

    I love the term "deferred maintenance." It's a classy way of saying "neglect."

  • @basvriese1934
    @basvriese1934 Před 6 měsíci +1649

    I feel like one important thing that determines whether brutalist architecture looks good is it's relation to the surrounding nature, if it feels like just a box of dominant concrete without ornamentation it can feel too imposing and bland, but if it is blended in with the surrounding nature in the right way it can evoke the same kind of beauty that mountains can.

    • @0123MGR
      @0123MGR Před 6 měsíci +55

      In Brazil that is well done. Mostly in Brasilia, the capital. There are structures called “cobogós” that allow the light to enter the building but prevent the heat.

    • @HelgaCavoli
      @HelgaCavoli Před 6 měsíci +3

      Yes, true. But even without the cobogós there are options in Brutalism to remain true to its fundaments/basis/laws.

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf Před 6 měsíci +2

      BASICALLY SUPERVILLIAN VS SUPERHERO

    • @prplt
      @prplt Před 6 měsíci +2

      its relation not it's (=it is)

    • @LMAO-fs1bt
      @LMAO-fs1bt Před 6 měsíci +8

      There is a famous college in india that is IIM Banglore that has his structure blended with trees looks good

  • @matthewpentecost9604
    @matthewpentecost9604 Před 6 měsíci +1084

    My main beef with Brutalism as a movement is that it always seems to revolve around the egos and artistic sensibilities of the architectural community, as opposed to any serious consideration for people who have to use the buildings on a daily basis. I have lived and studied on two brutalist campuses, and it can be a really unpleasant experience. Cold, hostile, uninviting, dark, damp, incoherent, and always feeling completely out of place. If you want to build a massive concrete sculpture in your own backyard, be my guest. But please don't make the rest of us live and work in it.

    • @Guizambaldi
      @Guizambaldi Před 6 měsíci +123

      I kind of agree with you. Most people have conservative sensibilities in art. Music, paintings, sculptures, movies, etc, can be appreciated privately. Architecture cannot. It affects everybody.
      I understand architects really appreciate their avant garde stuff, but to the layman like myself it's hard to see beauty in some buildings.

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf Před 6 měsíci +3

      Idk but it is nice

    • @ramochai
      @ramochai Před 6 měsíci +14

      Well said!

    • @acoldhand
      @acoldhand Před 6 měsíci +76

      THIS. I went to school in a brutalist building for 8 yrs and so many students said they felt uncomfortable in the building. Personally I felt like it enhanced my existing anxiety.

    • @krombopulos_michael
      @krombopulos_michael Před 6 měsíci +56

      Fully agree. It's the worst kind of ivory tower leftism where it ostensibly tries to be egalitarian while completely scorning the opinions of the normal people who have to use it. It's like demanding that everyone listen to avant garde jazz music instead of pop songs.

  • @DustinHallXVX
    @DustinHallXVX Před 6 měsíci +409

    I work right next to Evans Hall and it is worth emphasizing just how much it blocks the view of the bay and SF. It's wild. PLUS: It has ominous lore since, being the math building, it also had the distinction for being the most jumped-off building on campus (before it was retrofitted to prevent that from being possible).

    • @blahblah55237
      @blahblah55237 Před 6 měsíci +24

      I was also told by my GSI that the unabomber had an office at Evans when he used to work for UC Berkeley.

    • @AMPProf
      @AMPProf Před 6 měsíci +7

      OHHHHHHH right... "The smart kids Last leep"
      Blacked that out hard

    • @_mball_
      @_mball_ Před 6 měsíci +22

      The Unabomber did not have an office in Evans, though he mailed a bomb to Cory Hall. (Which may be replaced soonish too).
      Supposedly he left Berkeley in 1968-69 and Evans was built in 71.

    • @blahblah55237
      @blahblah55237 Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@_mball_ - Thanks for the correction. I guess my GSI was just passing on the campus mythos and rumors.

    • @michael_ball
      @michael_ball Před 6 měsíci +5

      I totally thought he did too! But then I had to check the dates.
      …now to see if can where his office actually was.

  • @starrysock
    @starrysock Před 6 měsíci +241

    There's something to be said for "leaving it raw" in a society where everything is ornate. But that's just not the society we live in anymore. So many cities in North America are filled with bare concrete walls. Some brutalist, others just cost-cutting. But regardless, the end result is the same: spending the majority of your life in a world surrounded by soulless, bare concrete.
    I'd also argue that just because something makes for a good instagram picture, doesn't mean it's somewhere you'd want to inhabit. Just look at the whole "liminal space" trend of finding the grimiest, emptiest mall hallway possible
    So much of the justification for these buildings seems to be abstract philosophy too, rather than "do people actually enjoy this?" Some buildings are historically significant, some are interesting, but when brutalism has gained a reputation of being despised by the people who actually coexist with these buildings, maybe it's time to learn from it and move on to something better.

    • @new-lviv
      @new-lviv Před 6 měsíci +8

      As mentioned in another comment, with the natural surrounding this kind of architecture works - and I'd add that it works in the warm climate. In the areas where winter is cold, naked concrete is not very energy efficient. Also, based on the responses some of the buildings are not very well built, related to the style or not - that makes sense to demolish them.

  • @nickbovee4372
    @nickbovee4372 Před 6 měsíci +371

    In my opinion, a photograph is the only place where brutalist buildings actually shine. But even the most depressing towns with 50yrs of overdue maintenance looks chearful on a photo in bright sunlight. Doesn't mean you wanna live or work in it.

    • @Timmakesmusic
      @Timmakesmusic Před 6 měsíci +52

      This - buildings designed for architectural magazines and artsy dutch-angle photographs, not for people. No thought for context, maintenance and the actual human experience of living and working in them. The ultimate expression of form over function.

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 6 měsíci +12

      I do.
      I want to live there.
      I want to work there.
      There is something stable and honest about it.
      It feels solid and supportive. And nothing else.
      But hey, that's just me.

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Prophes0r Well, that’s what the artist argued.

    • @nickbovee4372
      @nickbovee4372 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@Dramat1c_Irony Who said form comes over function? I didn't. However, I am sure that we can have both function ánd form. If we could make nice looking functional buildings hundreds or even thousands of years ago, why not now?

    • @Timmakesmusic
      @Timmakesmusic Před 6 měsíci +20

      @@Dramat1c_Irony That is the irony. Brutalism is NOT functional. Everything is about the shape of the building and achieving a particular 'modern' aesthetic. How it functions is a distant second (as anyone who has had the misfortune of being responsible for the maintenance of a Brutalist building will tell you).
      "Form ever follows function" (a maxim by architect Louis Sullivan) does not mean that buildings can't have 'ornamentation' or surface detail. Just look at Sullivan's own designs. This is one of the most misunderstood sayings in all of design.
      In fact, ornamentation is what allows form to follow function e.g. a building might need gutters and downpipes to manage rainwater. They are practical but you can build on their practical function and make them beautiful also. They may be embellished, but almost every feature you see in a traditional building also has a practical function.
      As soon as 'ornamentation' became taboo, the entire building became the ornament. The building became a single sculptural form. It must look 'modern' above every other consideration. Practical features, like pitched roofs, gutters, window sills, drip edges, quoins etc. are avoided because they might make a building look 'tradtional'. This means a whole lot of function was thrown out of the proverbial window just to make buildings look a certain way.

  • @bailey9695
    @bailey9695 Před 6 měsíci +234

    I work inside Evans Hall and (shockingly) being inside Evans is much worse than looking at it from the outside 😅None of the grad students in my department have windows, and many of the biggest classrooms in the building also lack windows. Not to mention that it is incredibly seismically unsafe, has extraordinarily poor ventilation, asbestos contamination, no air conditioning, terrifying elevators, etc.
    They claim they're moving us but I have no expectation of that happening before finishing my PhD 🙃

    • @nunya___
      @nunya___ Před 6 měsíci +3

      Asbestos isn't a contamination. It's an insulation and safe if you don't bust it up and breath it in. I get your point though...time for a safer, energy efficient beautiful building. BTW if there's an earthquake with damage to the building, put on a real painter's respirator. The kind with cartridges.

    • @Revolushun1
      @Revolushun1 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I will say though, Evans hall had great rooms for sections. Loved those little moving desks

    • @somethinlike23
      @somethinlike23 Před 6 měsíci +11

      Yes, this is how Univerisyt of Illinois-Chicago is. Inside is terrible and depressing. The Behavioral Sciences Building does an excellent job of making you feel like you're in a maze for the purposes of analyzing your behavior. This video misses the major aspect of how it is to inhabit these architecture as art projects.

    • @bodybuilderslave7125
      @bodybuilderslave7125 Před 6 měsíci +4

      "None of the grad students in my department have windows,".....perhaps they have Chrome.

  • @barneylaurance1865
    @barneylaurance1865 Před 6 měsíci +377

    It's maybe a bit ironic that the creators of the brutalist Barbican arts centre & housing complex in London didn't simply "leave the concrete raw" in many places - instead they hired a team of Italian artisans to bash a it up and cover it with little dents - making it look even more raw than it originally was.

    • @loca8048
      @loca8048 Před 6 měsíci +33

      Like jeans with shotgun holes.

    • @woahicantbelievethat
      @woahicantbelievethat Před 6 měsíci +10

      I've had a guided tour in the Barbican complex and I came out of that experience with a new found love for brutalist architecture... I still prefer neogothic but I understand the necessity for raw concrete

    • @ermland732
      @ermland732 Před 6 měsíci +26

      It's also ironic that almost none of the architects themselves dare to live in the complexes that they create. Instead they live in beautiful classic villas and townhouses.

    • @mildlydispleased3221
      @mildlydispleased3221 Před 6 měsíci +4

      They bulldozed the thousand-year old market town of Croydon to replace it with a brutalist hellhole. Although I find it quite charming.

    • @macallan1010
      @macallan1010 Před 6 měsíci +2

      What are you guys talking about, Barbican is beautiful.

  • @mccoolguy1973
    @mccoolguy1973 Před 6 měsíci +361

    I think we should also be reminded of the time period when brutalism was initially popular. This was around the time when neighborhoods were being destroyed to build highways and new housing (which was often not maintained well). One of Le Corbusier's most famous plans (Plan Voisin, which was never implemented) was the destruction of central Paris to build a few highways and some "towers in a park," which was just some tall housing complexes surrounded by green space. This style of architecture has historically been in contrast with older styles, to the point of its architects wanting the destruction of those older styles. I think that's one of the main reasons why it is despised; historical neighborhoods and buildings were bulldozed in order to put in some concrete brutalist structures which age poorly.

    • @KingMikolaj
      @KingMikolaj Před 6 měsíci +60

      oh wow so it goes hand in hand with car centric infrastructure which plagues us. No wonder I hate brutalism.

    • @pistolen87
      @pistolen87 Před 6 měsíci +60

      Brutalism is anti humanist. It's less concerned about the people that are going to live in and around the buildings and more interested in some kind of centrally planned "perfection".

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 6 měsíci +4

      The argument I've heard most often is "It was the architecture of oppressive cold-war regimes." which is definitely was.
      However, I still love it. There is something so honest and stable feeling about it.
      I hate how people only associate Brutalism with cold uncaring government buildings.
      My dream home is concrete, steel, and glass (Probably at the edge of a forest, with some water nearby).
      That or a converted loft in some industrial warehouse.
      (Exactly the kind of place a protagonist from a 90's show shot in Toronto would live. Highlander, Forever Knight, Etc)

    • @aaronclift
      @aaronclift Před 6 měsíci +26

      Brutalism also seems to go hand in hand with totalitarianism.

    • @soccerandtrack10
      @soccerandtrack10 Před 6 měsíci

      The joke is sort of right?/history.

  • @Urbanhandyman
    @Urbanhandyman Před 6 měsíci +404

    Brutalism can look and feel good. On the U.C. Berkeley campus exists Wurster Hall (architecture and design bulding) and the former art museum (now a bioresearch facility). Both building are very interesting even if one doesn't "like" them because of the use of exposed concrete. Evans Hall is an example of a building that nobody likes, is overscaled to its surrounding environment, and is a failure on all fronts. It's actually painted with no raw concrete visible. It has windowless classrooms. It's a very depressing place to be inside. Tearing it down will harm no one on any level. If this Vox video suggests NOT tearing it down just because it's an example of concrete brutalism, then they need to admit that they're wrong.

    • @blahblah55237
      @blahblah55237 Před 6 měsíci +29

      Thanks for reminding me how depressing Evans Hall is. I had math classes there - the fluorescent lighting did not help in combating the image it is a depressing place.

    • @Coecoo
      @Coecoo Před 6 měsíci +10

      The real sadness is that we have billions of people with astronomically more education, tools and law-defying materials at their disposal compared to the medieval ages, renaissance, etc, yet despite several decades, we have not come close to having any sort of iconic architecture that does not involve concrete bricks or samey skyscrapers.

    • @sftrick
      @sftrick Před 6 měsíci +1

      Does it still have carpet on the walls instead of on the floor???

    • @_mball_
      @_mball_ Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I think it's the inside that really does it for most folks.
      An no, no carpets on the walls that I am aware of.

    • @SniffyPoo
      @SniffyPoo Před 6 měsíci +4

      Spent years taking classes there; agree with your sentiments. Dark. Dungeony. Hospitalish interior.

  • @spacepop7186
    @spacepop7186 Před 6 měsíci +230

    Oh, so brutalism is the architect equivalent of electronics having clear plastic on the 90s/00s to show off the construction. That puts a new light on the style

    • @Caterfree10
      @Caterfree10 Před 6 měsíci +20

      At least the clear plastic still looks cool, sustainability aside.

    • @HelgaCavoli
      @HelgaCavoli Před 6 měsíci +5

      The idea isn't to over-use materials, but use them well. As mentioned in the three fundaments.

    • @li_tsz_fung
      @li_tsz_fung Před 6 měsíci +17

      And we learnt that clear plastic and raw concrete just never age well. And they both evolved into something else,

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Caterfree10 About as cool as tacking a wing and large tailpipe on a car.

    • @Caterfree10
      @Caterfree10 Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@jc3drums916 ‘scuse you, those are also still cool. :p

  • @ethans9610
    @ethans9610 Před 6 měsíci +175

    I am a structural engineer and I graduated a few years ago from Berkeley. I'm glad that the seismic rating of Evans was brought up. However, I feel that comparing Evans with other buildings on campus that have a "poor" seismic rating is a bit unjustified. Evans is one of the largest buildings on campus and is used by orders of magnitude more students than the other buildings. It is also home to several university departments, I believe, such as Math and Data Science. Therefore, its poor seismic performance will have a more severe impact on students' life safety, compared to other buildings.
    Another similar building, the Moffit Undergraduate Library, which also appeared in the video, recently went through a comprehensive seismic retrofit. However, a retrofit may not be feasible for Evans given its sheer size. When it comes to the demolition decision, I think these are some of the most important factors considered. Obviously, other factors such as architecture, coherence with the surrounding environment, and functionality of the building itself, are also brought into the equation. In the case of Evans, keeping the building just for the sake of preserving its architecture style just does not add up.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Want good Cityplanning? Not-Just-bikes, Edenicity, Cody Johnston, they all have talked about this epicly!!

  • @johnserino6
    @johnserino6 Před 6 měsíci +144

    I personally find the style cold and sterile yet still dingy and definitely uninviting.
    I grew up in Boston. City hall square was famously done this way years ago. Everyone I know absolutely hates it.

    • @mammajamma4397
      @mammajamma4397 Před 6 měsíci +9

      This is exactly what it is

    • @sabretooth1997
      @sabretooth1997 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Who would have thought that barren, wind-swept spaces were not good at being places people wanted to visit?

    • @titusarnklint8581
      @titusarnklint8581 Před 6 měsíci +11

      True. They feel too far from the human element so to say. A symbol of the cold, stiff systems that we work for instead of the reverse.

    • @Ebb0Productions
      @Ebb0Productions Před 6 měsíci +2

      I love Boston City Hall.

    • @titusarnklint8581
      @titusarnklint8581 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Ebb0Productions Good for you.

  • @finnyjam8252
    @finnyjam8252 Před 6 měsíci +367

    Brutalism can be done really well, but I feel like the litmus test should be whether or not a building looks good in bad weather, something which older styles are better at.

    • @cmul7651
      @cmul7651 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Its the colour

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +33

      @@cmul7651 It's everything actually. We've evolved to live in our natural habitat, nature, which we know is stimulating by research and as such a lot of older architecture tries to implement the natural patterns, ratios and colors of nature. There is also a lot of evidence that the beauty around us has a great effect on our health and well being, which is why architecture is so important and the reason why modern architecture (that throws this rule of thumb out of the window) is so disliked; it essentially goes against what we are hardwired to like.

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@8is I'd be curious to read this research you mentioned, and whether or not it actually demonstrates a tangible link to modernism, or if that's just something people extrapolate to be able to claim their aesthetic taste is somehow inherently superior. Even if it were true, a large part of the human experience is rational thought and knowledge allowing us to overcome our base instincts. One could just as easily trot out the old trope of people not liking modernism because they don't understand it.

    • @liamastill6733
      @liamastill6733 Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@jc3drums916 The sample size is the world's tourism sector. Nobody is going to new build cities in China to see their spectacular brutalism.

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +6

      ​@@jc3drums916 Sure. Since you can't write links in CZcams comments, I'll just refer you to TAC's video "What Makes Buildings Beautiful (And Why Beauty Does Matter)" where he lists a ton of great books, articles and polls in the pinned comment; you really ought to check him out, he explains the data much better than I can. As for humans' rational thought, I think what you're really alluding to is taste because taste is the part of how we perceive beauty that can be trained. Studies show how architect students and the general public rate buildings completely opposite from each other, especially the longer the student has studied architecture. However, it's not as clear cut since, by all means, a lot of modern architects don't live in the types of buildings they design and many do indeed still chose to pay a premium to live in traditional housing. This still points in the direction that beauty is something inherently biological and that, the same way we cannot chose to decide what people look beautiful and not, their is objective beauty in architecture independently of any rationality.

  • @marissaemily8452
    @marissaemily8452 Před 6 měsíci +64

    I like when there’s an added element to balance the brutalism a bit more. Usually nature or more irregular shapes/designs. If it’s all grey rectangles and hard lines it feels too impersonal and unwelcoming to me.

    • @SamyasaSwi
      @SamyasaSwi Před 6 měsíci +4

      Yeah I agree. Even though I'd probably never call a brutalist building beautiful, in "proper" context it can have it's appeal.
      But that context is almost never where you can find actual brutalist buildings.

    • @slenderfoxx3797
      @slenderfoxx3797 Před 6 měsíci +2

      A prison scene

  • @dameazize
    @dameazize Před 6 měsíci +14

    While a defiantly think we should try and preserve architecture, I think this undersells how unpleasant most brutalist buildings are to be in. Especially in a college campus, every brutalist building I have had classes or worked in has just been...uncomfortable as a space. And there has had to be a lot of interior work done to it to make it more pleasant. Like all architecture, it's not just an aesthetic choice, but also one that influences the daily interactions people have with the space

  • @anatheistsopinion9974
    @anatheistsopinion9974 Před 6 měsíci +798

    Brutalist buildings can be beautiful, but exceptions like Evans Hall are plentiful.

    • @mindaugaspakalniskis4982
      @mindaugaspakalniskis4982 Před 6 měsíci +139

      The exception is where brutalism is beautiful, not the other way round

    • @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female
      @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female Před 6 měsíci +45

      Brutalism is dystopian cyberpunk.

    • @linkhidalgogato
      @linkhidalgogato Před 6 měsíci +8

      @@Sigma_Male_Anti_Female brutalism is pure raw beauty there is no architectural style LESS dystopian.

    • @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female
      @Sigma_Male_Anti_Female Před 6 měsíci +51

      @@linkhidalgogato You just like depression.

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP Před 6 měsíci +11

      Why everyone hates this concrete building 1551pm 6.11.23 brutalism is horrendous. and if you have lived in such a building you'd know how tedious they are... brutalism is horrendous. that's the attraction. they should have saved rochdale bus station as opposed to the more pretentious preston city bus station.

  • @StarryNightGazing
    @StarryNightGazing Před 6 měsíci +121

    Brutalist is divisive in the sense that posh detached architects who live in nature immersed mansions love it, and us people who actually have to live those atrocities day by day hate it.

    • @niiii_niiii
      @niiii_niiii Před 6 měsíci +4

      Ha omg I think you might have nailed it there.....

    • @elizabethjohnson7103
      @elizabethjohnson7103 Před 6 měsíci +2

      100%

    • @lucycat241
      @lucycat241 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I agree.

    • @Oru328
      @Oru328 Před 6 měsíci +21

      People advocating for more brutalism clearly havent lived in a city dominated by it. Its the bleakest dreariest type of city you can imagine

    • @maxhill9254
      @maxhill9254 Před 6 měsíci +1

      True!!!

  • @gracehuang8571
    @gracehuang8571 Před 6 měsíci +36

    I read the earthquake report and Evans and Moffitt were the worst rated but Moffitt is only a 5-story, partially underground building and it went through renovations to reinforce it for earthquake safety last year. Evans is not nearly as easily reinforced. Evans is the clear contender for bull-dozing and replaced with smaller buildings. Its position on campus blocks the view of much better buildings.

  • @korakys
    @korakys Před 6 měsíci +109

    I'm not saying brutalism is the greatest mistake in architecture, I just can't personally think of a bigger one.

    • @tappydani9378
      @tappydani9378 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Sphere buildings

    • @HorseWithNoBane
      @HorseWithNoBane Před 6 měsíci

      Maybe wait for a few decades and people will look back with nostalgia or bewilderment.

    • @brianwhite2104
      @brianwhite2104 Před 6 měsíci +19

      I can... Tearing down so many beautiful Victorian-era structures in the 1950s-60s was a bigger mistake.

    • @slenderfoxx3797
      @slenderfoxx3797 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@brianwhite2104 well I think the original comment was just about biggest mistake when it came to building and designing stuff...the biggest creation and artistic mistakes...not talking about the preservation or destruction of buildings.

    • @brianwhite2104
      @brianwhite2104 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@slenderfoxx3797 Well in that case I can still think of worse mistakes... like bridges that were structurally unsound and collapsed like the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.

  • @hannahkasun5207
    @hannahkasun5207 Před 6 měsíci +67

    As a former music student at UW-Madison, I spent hours a day, every day in the humanities building mentioned in the video, which is known for its lack of windows, frequent cockroaches, leaky walls and ceilings, draftiness, and people constantly asking you how to get places. There is even a campus myth about it being built to be riot proof because of how inhospitable and confusing it is. Yes, it photographs well, particularly against a bright blue sky, but the daily experience of using it was confusing and oppressive and future students will be lucky when there is a building that replaces it.

    • @new-lviv
      @new-lviv Před 6 měsíci +2

      These buildings are Instagrammable because of their sculptural form, that's why they went viral on the Internet. It is a reminder of how deceiving the medium of photography is.

    • @Tashiea
      @Tashiea Před 5 měsíci

      THIS!! Fellow UW-Madison alumni who completely agrees.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před 6 měsíci +133

    To me brutalism is like the 12-tone music of architecture: it's "out with the old, in with the new" just for the sake of it and it has a philosophy about how people _ought_ to be, what they ought to like, not how they actually are. There's a reason why we've moved on to postmodernism.

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +21

      They both suffer from the same problem though. There is a lot of evidence for objective beauty when it comes to basic shapes that is derived from our evolution. For example, we've evolved to live in our natural habitat, nature, which we know is stimulating by research and as such a lot of older architecture tries to implement the natural patterns, ratios and colors of nature. Modern architecture throws all this out the window; it essentially goes against what we are hardwired to like and there is a lot of evidence that the beauty around us has a great effect on our health and well being.

    • @willcwhite
      @willcwhite Před 6 měsíci +13

      Exactly. And created by the same cohort of edgelords who wanted to show the world to recognize their genius because of how "intense" they were.

    • @HorseWithNoBane
      @HorseWithNoBane Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@willcwhiteThat's how art is. Got tired of the current and trying out something different.

  • @2005Cardinals
    @2005Cardinals Před 6 měsíci +21

    Just taught in Evans Hall this morning! It’s awful in any kind of heat: most first-floor classrooms have no windows or much at all in terms of ventilation, and it can get rather unpleasant.
    Some fabulous chalkboards, though!

    • @_mball_
      @_mball_ Před 6 měsíci +9

      Good to find all the berkeley folks in the comments of a Vox video. 🤣
      Yeah, it's no fun to teach in... especially the basement.

  • @igorfillipe
    @igorfillipe Před 6 měsíci +33

    I studied in Universidade de Brasília that was built entirely in brutalism architecture, but what differentiates itself from the rest was the way it blends with the nature. There are gardens inside and outside the buildings, the trees are not pruned or cut down to highlight the architecture, they are part of the architecture.

    • @AntonioOliveira-tx2or
      @AntonioOliveira-tx2or Před 3 měsíci

      UNB is ridiculously good!
      One thing that Latin Americans have to keep in mind when we see this content is to understand that in general, brutalism here is significantly better than the US average, for example.
      Brutalism here sought inspiration, for example, in traditional buildings, they were more concerned with bioclimatic adaptation, which led to much better integration with the landscape.
      They are much more elegant buildings, and with solutions on a much more humanized scale.
      That makes a huge difference.

  • @johnserino6
    @johnserino6 Před 6 měsíci +35

    This kind of architecture is great.
    When you don't have to look at it every day.

    • @Kintabl
      @Kintabl Před 6 měsíci +1

      Yeah, ike bunkers.

  • @johnmckeon4498
    @johnmckeon4498 Před 6 měsíci +9

    We had a building like this that housed offices for faculty at my university. I only visited it twice. Once to enjoy the smell of mold while meeting with a professor. And once to help a friend shoot a horror-themed short film. That's what I associate with this style of achitecture.

  • @thomasleonard8789
    @thomasleonard8789 Před 6 měsíci +11

    "Why not these buildings?" Well based on the one second image of each I'd say for one they aren't as tall as Evans and therefore there's less risk, something like that might, you know, inform the prioritization of one building over another.

  • @Shako_Lamb
    @Shako_Lamb Před 6 měsíci +11

    Not many people talk about the subcategory of brick brutalism. Essentially brutalism but predominantly with red bricks in running bond instead of concrete. Ulrich Franzen was a notable architect who worked in this style. It's very common at Cornell University, including Franzen's own Bradfield Hall, an 11-story plant biology research building with only two windows each for 10 of the 11 floors. Franzen also designed the Harpers Ferry Interpretive Design Center (at almost the same time as Bradfield), which sits out of view of the historic town but is unmissable for anyone hiking the Appalachian Trail. Currently I'm at the University of Vermont and we have Howe Library, and a few other brick brutalist structures were demolished a few years ago.

    • @Roxor128
      @Roxor128 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Sounds similar to my old high school, except that used off-white bricks. It was pretty good. It had high ceilings, lots of light, and was mostly built from the aforementioned bricks, with some cast concrete for pillars and stairs, and some wood in the doorways and benches outside classrooms.

    • @gohanssj48
      @gohanssj48 Před 4 měsíci

      In Brazil, we call this type of style "Favelas" you can Google It to see the best ones.

  • @kentslocum
    @kentslocum Před 6 měsíci +37

    I work in a university building that was "renovated". It ended up with raw plywood interior walls (no sheetrock!), unpolished concrete floors, and crumbling exposed brick in the restrooms. Raw architecture can be a nightmare when it's just an excuse for being lazy.

  • @KevinSmith-qi5yn
    @KevinSmith-qi5yn Před 6 měsíci +18

    I like how Yale's old buildings look. They have a classic charm that tells you about the history of the University. I think people hate brutalism because the buildings have no life to them. They are utilitarian and expendable. The decoration involved in the older style shows craftsmanship at the human scale. Modern architecture typically has large areas of nothing between the large blocks used to create the structure.

  • @danielkjm
    @danielkjm Před 6 měsíci +7

    Bro really likes Soviet Style Buildings

  • @Kholdstare52
    @Kholdstare52 Před 6 měsíci +4

    As a Stony Brook grad, I'm really happy you included our university hospital. Alot of the brutalist architecture on campus was horrible (Roosevelt Quad) but the hospital was a standout beauty!!!

  • @FeyPax
    @FeyPax Před 6 měsíci +6

    As SOON as I saw the thumbnail I was like yooo that HAS to be my college math building. Most buildings on campus are in brutalism and then some buildings are more early 20th century. It almost clashes but part of me kinda likes it.

  • @YongJoonPaek
    @YongJoonPaek Před 6 měsíci +27

    I'm an Economist and studied at Evans hall... such a depressing, yet iconic place. I miss it.

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP Před 6 měsíci

      Why everyone hates this concrete building 1557pm 6.11.23 has sean scully had his painterly depictions implemented into the united nations' building construction (as seen in london?)

  • @ArgentPendragon
    @ArgentPendragon Před 6 měsíci +4

    As an alum of UMass Amherst, they should’ve shown Du Bois library. It’s a tall red cuboid structure in the center of campus. I initially didn’t like its simple nature at first but I grew to see it as a very distinctive beacon of the college to the surrounding area. Definitely recommend looking up pictures of the new Isenberg building as well.

  • @KieranBond
    @KieranBond Před 6 měsíci +6

    It's not on a college campus but the barbican gallery in London is one of the most amazing brutalist buildings, I remember going On a trip there with college when I was doing my graphic design BTEC and being in awe at the design.

  • @EduardQualls
    @EduardQualls Před 6 měsíci +7

    *"Brutalist architecture" looks like cheaply and hurriedly constructed, WWII German fortifications: it's dehumanizing, threatening and, indeed, psychologically **_brutal,_** in the English-language sense of the word.* Wherever brutalist buildings are said to "match surrounding nature," the effect is that of those abandoned, but still ominous, WWII bunkers: sitting silent, just waiting for nature's power to erase men's horrific mistakes. *Just like "Bauhaus," brutalism is the accounting-inspired and -enforced product of cost-cutting, not of uplifting design: it's architecture by and for "the suits."*

  • @turiancamila
    @turiancamila Před 6 měsíci +2

    Brutal video! As always, Thanks, Vox!

  • @j.a.velarde5901
    @j.a.velarde5901 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Beautiful. A wonderful documentary AND THANK YOU.

  • @khrdina
    @khrdina Před 6 měsíci +4

    The building that appears briefly at 0:22 looks like the International House of Philadelphia, just off the University of Pennsylvania campus at 37th and Chestnut streets. I lived in that building for my senior year (a long time ago) and really liked it.
    Apparently it is called something else these days.
    There are also three high-rise towers on campus that are used as residence halls which might be considered Brutalist. I lived in one of those as well.

  • @gmclucy
    @gmclucy Před 6 měsíci +8

    "What's more depressing than Soviet combloc apartments?"
    "Homelessness"

  • @AngelaSealana
    @AngelaSealana Před 6 měsíci

    Great editing on this piece!

  • @wilberforce95
    @wilberforce95 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I'm glad you included a photo from Temple University in the beginning, there's a bunch of brutalist buildings on that campus.

  • @TheMedicatedArtist
    @TheMedicatedArtist Před 6 měsíci +4

    Where was this video during my senior exhibition? I struggled finding a diverse array of American Brutalist examples besides Marcel Breuer (with sources).

  • @beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees
    @beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees Před 6 měsíci +3

    When Professor Rohan is talking about the "Flagship campus" (4:16) you show a picture of UMass Lowell. Professor Rohan teaches at UMass Amherst, which you cited correctly in his introduction. They're different schools, although both feature brutalist buildings.

    • @stephenren8794
      @stephenren8794 Před 6 měsíci +2

      For a moment that beige building I thought was lederle and it was a shot from northeast, but at closer inspection I was like, where did that river come from!

  • @DiazThumb
    @DiazThumb Před 6 měsíci

    love this design, explained series!

  • @AutoGarageTV
    @AutoGarageTV Před 5 měsíci +2

    Brutalism looks great on paper and in pictures, but for those who have the unfortunate luck of working in such a building day-to-day, it's horrifically depressing and it's like walking into a federal prison everyday.

  • @pjotrtje0NL
    @pjotrtje0NL Před 6 měsíci +4

    I spent roughly 4 years studying biology in the Brutalist building of the Utrecht University. I love that building, not just because of the memories made there. I loved it from Day 1!

    • @Kintabl
      @Kintabl Před 6 měsíci +2

      Thank you for sharing with us that you have a bad taste.

  • @happyelephant5384
    @happyelephant5384 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Comiblocks made their way even in the USA, I see

  • @gwendolynmizak2356
    @gwendolynmizak2356 Před 6 měsíci +2

    paul rudolph designed my high school! sadly i never got to see it because it was demolished in 2009 but the new verison is still very brutalist inspired. also love the design of the sarasota high school building that was featured in the video, one of my favorites in sarasota.

  • @tylero354
    @tylero354 Před 6 měsíci +2

    During the zoom days I made Evans my virtual background and every professor and student loved it

  • @deadpooleo18
    @deadpooleo18 Před 6 měsíci +8

    Oh lord do I hope brutalisim doesn't take off again. All but a few of the most creative buildings are absolutely putrid. There is a reason classic styles are classic

  • @brianthesnail3815
    @brianthesnail3815 Před 6 měsíci +5

    I live in a medieval city in the UK. In the 1960s the socialist local authority bulldozed churches and old buildings and built brutalist architecture everywhere sometimes in brown concrete. One of them has now become Listed which means it is protected as 'it is one of the finest examples of cantilevered concrete'.
    In fact, it is truly 'brutalising' because in the case of my city it was done deliberately to erase history. Le Corbusier did it for that reason as well. It was designed to force humans to relinquish the ties that bound them family, community, culture and history. They knocked down one of the finest medieval lychgate in Europe (where the coffins of the dead would wait before entering the Cathedral) and then they built a foul concrete multi storey car park and hotel on it. Brutalism happened in many cities in the UK in the 1960s where they created vast soulless tower blocks in concrete that destroyed old neighbourhoods and atomised a human sense of identity.

  • @StarJDog
    @StarJDog Před 6 měsíci +3

    UW-Madison was shown in the part discussing "tearing down" buildings. For context, when the State Regent President (head of all universities) was on campus discussing failing infrastructure, a 5 x 5 foot cube of concrete fell off a brutalist building about 50 feet from where they were standing.
    "Deferred maintenance" is what caused these problems.

  • @jimbart8605
    @jimbart8605 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Petty fact check but the image shown at around 4:15 is UMass Lowell not UMass flagship

  • @captainwolfe1147
    @captainwolfe1147 Před 6 měsíci +10

    My favorite brutalist buildings are the ones with large windows and plentiful light, and that do fun things with the malleability of concrete, like showing the wood grain of the forms it was in. I know being in brutalist buildings can make some people uncomfortable, but I feel like, when done artfully, they can be warm, solid places. The school I work at is in a brutalist building, but there is an abundance of light on every floor as it's an architecture school and students need light for their drawing and modeling.

    • @Roxor128
      @Roxor128 Před 6 měsíci +2

      My high school was like that, too. High ceilings, lots of light, and most walls light-coloured bricks with the odd cast-concrete pillar or staircase and wooden doorways. It was wonderfully tactile and not remotely depressing.

  • @blackvbird
    @blackvbird Před 6 měsíci +9

    When I read the title, I knew that UMASS Amherst would be included in this video. Its buildings are a work of art!

  • @hayeonkim7838
    @hayeonkim7838 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Thanks for valuable and useful video as always ❤❤❤

  • @IsaacKuo
    @IsaacKuo Před 6 měsíci +1

    The view FROM Evans Hall is fantastic.

  • @chrisdooley1184
    @chrisdooley1184 Před 6 měsíci +4

    God I want to buy that Lloyd Wright house with the waterfall underneath it 😊

  • @adamkatolik1633
    @adamkatolik1633 Před 6 měsíci +26

    If there is a single brutalist building on a nice green campus that can actually be nice. Worst is if there is an entire neighbourhood full of brutalist apartment blocks that have gone into disrepair.

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 6 měsíci +6

      IMO, the problem is the disrepair, not the brutalism.
      I love the solid, honest, reliable feel of raw concrete.

    • @StarryNightGazing
      @StarryNightGazing Před 6 měsíci +17

      @@Prophes0r brutalism feeds disrepair. No one cares about mantaining an atrocious slab of concrete.

    • @eps200
      @eps200 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@Prophes0r Brutalism ages exceptionally badly because of the bare concrete. All the talk of function over form is shown false by the rejection of simple paint.

    • @SkateSka
      @SkateSka Před 6 měsíci +1

      Oh you mean like half my country 😂 Or half of eastern Europe I suppose.

    • @adamkatolik1633
      @adamkatolik1633 Před 6 měsíci

      @@SkateSka not Just Eastern Europe, go to Street View and have a look at the Swiss Suburb of Bern Bumpliz Nord. If I woke up there and didn’t know where I was Switzerland would have been my last guess, I would have assumed somewhere in 1980s GDR!

  • @rohvir2615
    @rohvir2615 Před 6 měsíci +1

    many memories in evans hall gonna miss it!

  • @mikopiko
    @mikopiko Před 6 měsíci +1

    I hope the trend raises again, love these bizarre buildings

  • @sophies_games
    @sophies_games Před 6 měsíci +25

    I think the video game Control is worth mentioning here, its supernatural brutalism is incredible.

  • @XavierGuillaume
    @XavierGuillaume Před 6 měsíci +10

    At UWM there is a grey concrete building on campus. It is so hideous compared to the gorgeous red brick building which are pops of color. Ironically that building was selected as a winner of an architecture contest. Like seriously. Wut?

    • @AmaltheaVimes
      @AmaltheaVimes Před 6 měsíci +4

      I never understand this. It is like this in the art world too. A whole room of artwork. Dude with banana duct taped to wall wins. go figure. (that was an example... don't think it was the case, directly, but he kinda did win. Everything is banana duct taped to wall. )

  • @shinheelee2147
    @shinheelee2147 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Hi, Evans Hall, never expected to see you on Vox - GLHF in your remaining years - a Current Cal student

  • @wotaj
    @wotaj Před 6 měsíci

    Charlotte NC used to have a Convention Center done in this Brutalist Style, it was demolished to make way for the Bobcats' Arena, that has since become the Spectrum Center.

  • @Mira-bt3zx
    @Mira-bt3zx Před 6 měsíci +36

    My big issue with many brutalist buildings is that they’re out of scale with their environment. Boston City Hall is one that I’m pretty familiar with. It’s this massive structure around this massive plaza. When I look at it, I feel small and insignificant. In my opinion, a city hall should make anyone there feel at home, like the building is there for you. Not like the building is there and you’re insignificant relative to it.

    • @gavinathling
      @gavinathling Před 6 měsíci +1

      Boston City Hall is a good example. It's quite awesome, but also not particularly welcoming. The center of Albany, NY is similar. Although I think that might be better...

    • @chronic_payne5669
      @chronic_payne5669 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah no, that’s the least inviting building imaginable. It definitely has that penitentiary feel

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 6 měsíci

      SILENCE WORM
      Lol, had to check it out.
      Looks like a fanciful meatpacking facility.
      I bet they perform human sacrifice on a regular basis.

    • @SirFaceFone
      @SirFaceFone Před 6 měsíci

      It looks like a repurposed ancient temple to me.

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis Před 6 měsíci

      new glass boxed are not better at this

  • @jo-uf1js
    @jo-uf1js Před 6 měsíci +14

    im a uc berkeley student, everyone hates this building, and the inside of evans is even worse. its a depressing dungeon with tiny dingy windowless rooms where you go to suffer for math office hours. its unfortunately located smack in the most beautiful part of campus, literally right in front of our clock tower, the glade, and 3 other libraries. its such an eyesore but it has SO many rooms inside that i also wouldnt know where people would go w/o it, not on a campus limited to a few city blocks with 43,000 students 🤣

  • @redizit
    @redizit Před 4 měsíci +2

    Living, working, studying or even just being in a brutalist building is cold and depressing, just my personal feeling but wood and stone work with big windows feels so much more cozy

  • @theidiotic_one
    @theidiotic_one Před 6 měsíci +8

    as someone who grew up in one of those soviet apartments id say thats a nice building youve got there

  • @camilogonzalez-williamson6267
    @camilogonzalez-williamson6267 Před 6 měsíci +15

    Brutalism is so caught up in the ideals of the movement and it's philosophy that the design of these buildings usually fail to think about any aesthetic appeal for everyday people

  • @hikki6089
    @hikki6089 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I spent quite a lot of time in that library in UCSD during my college days. Always loved that building. But my all-time favorite is the Salk Institute. I agree with some of the comments that Brutalist style could work well if it was designed with its surrounding area in mind.

  • @devendragidvani6250
    @devendragidvani6250 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I had so many classes here, good times

  • @cpnyc
    @cpnyc Před 6 měsíci +17

    What a great video. I’ve always been drawn to these structures, and never thought to look into it. Now I know!

  • @rickrose5377
    @rickrose5377 Před 6 měsíci +6

    As an undergraduate, I attended classes nearly every day in Paul Rudolph's Yale Art & Architecture building. Besides using the library, I attended lectures by Ken Kesey (who brought with him a tank of nitrous oxide) and Raoul Walsh. It's a great building. I enjoyed being in it.

  • @skypigfilms
    @skypigfilms Před 6 měsíci

    I am actively sitting in this building right now, I opened up CZcams and saw this thumbnail. What a trip!

  • @HCoons1975
    @HCoons1975 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Reminds me of Faner Hall at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Rumors aboubd about the building. Most people hate it. I don't mind it. I think it reminds me of the public library of my hometown. Public libraries are safe space.

  • @ContextofTheDay
    @ContextofTheDay Před 6 měsíci +3

    Vox is one of the best channel in the world.❤

  • @jamesmalpus7371
    @jamesmalpus7371 Před 5 měsíci

    If you like the examples shown here have a look at the Barbican in London! Incredible building. Filmed some of Andor there and a Harry Sykes music video plus it has a concert hall, theatre and apartments.

  • @bigpurplepops
    @bigpurplepops Před 6 měsíci +1

    This is like the opposite feeling of watching bygone times in hd photography…
    I’m seeing old pictures of ‘new’ buildings that already look run down…

  • @ThatOneCoya
    @ThatOneCoya Před 6 měsíci +25

    While cool to watch, these buildings are so lifeless to look out. There’s no soul in these buildings, thats why everyone I know hates them.

    • @AllenKnutson
      @AllenKnutson Před 6 měsíci

      This particular one is awesome to look out, at the Bay view.

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +1

      There is a lot of evidence for objective beauty when it comes to basic shapes that is derived from our evolution. Modern architecture essentially goes against what we are hardwired to like and there is a lot of evidence that the beauty around us has a great effect on our health and well being.
      For example, we've evolved to live in our natural habitat, nature, which we know is stimulating by research and as such a lot of architecture tries to implement the natural patterns, ratios and colors of nature. Brutalism throws all this out the window.

  • @mmikael281
    @mmikael281 Před 6 měsíci +39

    Architects are a strange group of professionals who seem to hate people who have to look at the results of their work. Brutalism is a good example of this. Most people do not want gray buildings in their living environment. This should be the most important instruction for architects. Not some artistic nonsense.

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 6 měsíci +9

      I do. I want to live there.
      I want to work there.
      Brutalism is solid, honest, functional.
      I understand if another style is better for environmental or efficiency reasons.
      But don't come here arguing that "No one likes the look." because PLENTY of us do.
      It is my favorite style. And it is okay to have a different opinion.

    • @eps200
      @eps200 Před 6 měsíci

      The rejection of paint in favour of bare concrete shows the philosophy is a lie, it makes them almost impossible to properly maintain well. Nothing functional about that.
      Their tendency to be out of scale harms efficiency. it's also dishonest the building is imposing an ideal not serving the people already there.

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@Prophes0r There is a lot of evidence for objective beauty when it comes to basic shapes that is derived from our evolution. Modern architecture essentially goes against what we are hardwired to like and there is a lot of evidence that the beauty around us has a great effect on our health and well being.
      For example, we've evolved to live in our natural habitat, nature, which we know is stimulating by research and as such a lot of architecture tries to implement the natural patterns, ratios and colors of nature. Brutalism throws all this out the window.

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Meh. When it comes to matters of taste, I rarely trust the judgment of the majority.

    • @8is
      @8is Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@jc3drums916 You can never forget who you are building these buildings for.

  • @Jackson33miller
    @Jackson33miller Před 6 měsíci

    UMass Dartmouth mentioned in a Vox video! 😊
    The brutalist architecture is very divisive among students but I find it pretty up until the winter when the concrete makes campus feel even colder than it is. Our newest building are moving away from brutalist design which has created a lot of juxtaposition

  • @andriiperevodchyk
    @andriiperevodchyk Před 6 měsíci

    Which tool is that at 07:09? Is that something nice to record interviews over the internet?

  • @saskia.h
    @saskia.h Před 6 měsíci +4

    If the outside of these buildings were kept clean or at least given a color they might not look so miserable

  • @UnitedKingdom231
    @UnitedKingdom231 Před 6 měsíci +15

    I’m kinda sad he didn’t mention anything about brutalist buildings being cost efficient or convenient to build

    • @mirror-images
      @mirror-images Před 6 měsíci +1

      that was why they're often used for public housing right? as depressing as some find the Brutalist style it's miles less grim than mass homelessness...

  • @thefingerofgod69
    @thefingerofgod69 Před 6 měsíci

    I'm surprised that you used some building I don't even recognize instead of the Regenstein Library (the Reg) when you went to the University of Chicago.

  • @alexanderboulton2123
    @alexanderboulton2123 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Our Christiansen Hall of Music (apparently pronounced "Chris-Johnson Hall of Music") here at St. Olaf College in Minnesota has a pretty neat brutalist awning that I think would look SO good with some vines! Just goes to show that brutalism isn't just for big, awe-inspiring buildings; it's also for little things!

  • @Rjgxxx
    @Rjgxxx Před 6 měsíci +34

    Is also a really important environmental consideration when in looking at demolishing brutalist buildings. Heavy use of concrete means there's a huge amount of carbon trapped inside them. To demolish them and replace them means a huge amount more be released and needed to make a new building. Retro fitting and updating these buildings should always be the first option. There are fantastic examples of renovations to brutality buildings, see the National Theater in London.

    • @MichaelDodge27
      @MichaelDodge27 Před 6 měsíci +15

      That concrete can be used for other applications: Breakwater systems, land fill, etc. Brutalist buildings are not as modular and are more difficult to retrofit compared to other styles, especially when thinking of the mid-century college boom construction.

    • @marceloslacerda
      @marceloslacerda Před 6 měsíci

      Speaking of environmental impact, uncoated buildings absorb sunlight pretty well, which might or might not be a concern depending on the weather

    • @chronic_payne5669
      @chronic_payne5669 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ⁠​⁠@@marceloslacerdaBut concrete causes damage to the most fertile layer of earth, top soil and it contributes to runoff causing soil erosion, water pollution and flooding. Which causes large scale environmental impact

    • @500Nutella
      @500Nutella Před 6 měsíci +4

      As vital as it may be to preserve these structures wherever possible we also have to be aware that buildings mainly relying on concrete (even if it's just the foundation) must become a thing of the past. Something to look after and to maintain but not to be replicated.

    • @nunya___
      @nunya___ Před 6 měsíci

      @@500Nutella No it doesn't. (concrete causes damage to the most fertile layer of earth)

  • @corneliuswhite5139
    @corneliuswhite5139 Před 6 měsíci +8

    "Prisonism" would be a better name.

  • @KSPRAYDAD
    @KSPRAYDAD Před 6 měsíci +2

    Ottawa, Canada's National Capital had many brutalist buildings constructed in the 60's including our Carleton University school of architecture. Sadly, many have already met with a wrecking ball or are openly discussed as candidates to do so.

  • @rachaelgoldman5846
    @rachaelgoldman5846 Před 6 měsíci

    The Marcel Breuer- Colston Hall at Bronx Community College. It is used to be the New York University Campus in the Bronx.

  • @perhapsmaybe6824
    @perhapsmaybe6824 Před 6 měsíci +3

    i lived in the bryn mawr building shown- it actually made me appreciate brutalist architecture, bc the building is really incredible, but it was in desperate need for both AC and to actually be maintained

    • @mkkp1308
      @mkkp1308 Před 6 měsíci

      I lived in Erdman for a year and really liked it.

  • @lijmoo
    @lijmoo Před 6 měsíci

    The Barbican. Stunning.

  • @petervarley3078
    @petervarley3078 Před 6 měsíci

    What is the building at 7:05 with the exterior that looks like expanded metal? I like it!

  • @dragonskunkstudio7582
    @dragonskunkstudio7582 Před 6 měsíci +10

    Brutalist is architecture like a metronome is a music instrument.

  • @littlepersimmon
    @littlepersimmon Před 6 měsíci +24

    i can appreciate brutalism sometimes but i feel architects should also take into consideration the people that have to actually spend time in the buildings… for example why was mcmaster children’s hospital a good choice for brutalism lol

  • @tactileslut
    @tactileslut Před 6 měsíci

    Former mover. I ran into one of those cement coffee tables, once, two flights below street level. I hope the unloading crew had the strength and tools we had.