Brutalist Architecture in 6 Minutes: Ugly or Beautiful? 🤔

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2022
  • Can concrete be beautiful? Proponents of Brutalism certainly thought so. The general public, however, remains divided. While some view brutalist buildings as monstrosities and the greatest sin in the history of architecture, others consider them architectural landmarks with historical, cultural, and personal value.
    In this episode, we will explain the idea behind this genre of modernism that has become synonymous with dystopian films (A Clockwork Orange, Blade Runner 2049, and Resident Evil: Afterlife) and perhaps inspire a newfound appreciation for brutalist buildings. Stay tuned!
    #Brutalism #Architecture #CuriousMuse
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Комментарии • 771

  • @aaron2709
    @aaron2709 2 года назад +737

    There's a reason Brutalist aesthetics are used in EVERY dystopian movie.

    • @carlpissatto1198
      @carlpissatto1198 2 года назад +48

      Utopians too

    • @aaron2709
      @aaron2709 2 года назад +46

      @@carlpissatto1198 No,

    • @carlpissatto1198
      @carlpissatto1198 2 года назад +2

      @@aaron2709 the reason for the dystopian is: hollywood anti-communist crap propaganda

    • @bh251cc
      @bh251cc Год назад +48

      because of the red scare

    • @bh251cc
      @bh251cc Год назад +6

      i actually don’t know if that’s true lol. just a lil guess-y-poo 🫣:)

  • @KarlSnarks
    @KarlSnarks 2 года назад +438

    Because of its sculptural nature, I love seeing brutalist buildings on their own, with all the attention set towards it. However, if located in an urban environment, it either looks out of place when built near older and newer styles, or it looks drab when built among other brutalist apartment buildings. I've also seen a revival of "eco-brutalism" which isn't actually very eco-friendly, but just brutalist architecture overgrown with plant life (which gives it a nice contrast).

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +21

      Thanks for sharing your perspective! Eco-brutalism is an interesting mix indeed.

    • @magicknight13
      @magicknight13 2 года назад +4

      I totally agree!

    • @fnorgen
      @fnorgen 2 года назад +19

      Well, my main complaint with brutalist architecture is the general lack of finer visual details. The ubiquitous slabs of unpainted, undecorated grey concrete just get really depressing if you have to look at them too often. Similarly to how gothic cathedrals would look really drab and ugly if you removed all the greebling. Covering the featureless slabs with some plant life would solve that problem.
      Come to think of it, there's an old factory in my home town which actually looks almost beautiful because the entire façade is covered in lush climbing vines. Without them the place would look like a giant featureless grey wall as viewed from the street.

    • @rafiabiyyuanto6944
      @rafiabiyyuanto6944 2 года назад +9

      @@fnorgen usually that applies to bigger brutalist buildings. But if you start looking at smaller buildings like houses, you'll start to notice that there are many intricate details applied to the surface of the concrete, like the method used to apply the concrete that ends up showing different textures, or using fine details like patterns

    • @no_soy_rubio
      @no_soy_rubio Год назад +3

      The Barbican is a great example of eco-brutalism

  • @Toogoodtobetrue458
    @Toogoodtobetrue458 2 года назад +100

    I think I need more concrete examples to cement the idea behind brutalist architecture. 💪

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +13

      Concretely! 🤣

    • @track1219
      @track1219 2 года назад +1

      Many adherents also cling to that opinion

    • @tyronevaldez-kruger5313
      @tyronevaldez-kruger5313 2 года назад

      Like the mob that used to use concrete systematically to push the business and to decrease the population slightly a few decades ago.

    • @tyronevaldez-kruger5313
      @tyronevaldez-kruger5313 2 года назад

      😄😉

  • @triinbean
    @triinbean 2 года назад +134

    So living in Estonia, we have a lot of these types of structures. When it comes to government buildings or museums or such, I see the beauty of this type of architecture. But when it's looking at apartment complexes built during the soviet union, it is a sad reminder of what was and what may be again, and how it affects the everyday person. I will say my favorite part is when apartment owners of a complex come together and allow for a renovation of the exterior. Some even get murals on the sides of the building. Turning a sad reminder of the past into something new and beautiful.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +7

      🇪🇪👋! Murals definitely make these buildings look more fun!

    • @potcha
      @potcha Год назад

      It will be again, because the young in the west are convinced they have reached the end of history and figured out the answers to all the things people questioned before, like the best ways to govern. They hand wave away all of the horror and misery that the soviets caused, and pretend that it just was not done correctly before. Of course, THEY know how to do it correctly this time!
      Arrogant fools doomed to sacrifice god knows how many this time around

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 11 месяцев назад +7

      I'm going to be honest. I grew up in the 80s New York City. My families originally lived in a very bad part of Brooklyn (Brownsville) until we moved to a Long Island suburb. I remember across the street from our old building was a massive public school and housing complex, all built in the early 1970s in Brutalist/Futuristic style, and than decaying into a hellish, ghetto landscape. No Optimism. No Beauty. This is one art movement that I have no love for.

  • @davidamadore
    @davidamadore 2 года назад +90

    Please take the time to add labels to the buildings you use for illustration (giving their name and location), so that people who want to learn more about them can search easily.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +19

      Thanks for your feedback, we will make sure to include those labels next time.

    • @jonathanbowers8964
      @jonathanbowers8964 Год назад +1

      And call for them to be replaced with more humanizing and livable buildings. Seriously there are only like 10 brutalist buildings in the world that are actually beautiful and well cared for.

  • @StarlitSwamp
    @StarlitSwamp Год назад +81

    As someone who usually prefers colorful environments, part of me wants to find brutalist architecture bland and ugly, but I can't help being oddly fascinated by it. I think part of its charm (for me personally) has something to do with the coldness of vast, empty concrete rooms feeling more like liminal spaces to explore than homes to inhabit. The post-apocalyptic vibe strongly appeals to my extreme introversion.

  • @idnwiw
    @idnwiw 2 года назад +350

    I had a "showerthought" recenltly concerning Brutalism: The architects of this style spent their childhood in air-raid shelters. So it's no wonder that they associate safety, "cosyness" and survival with this massive concrete buildings. Later, more lucky generations don't have that association, so to us it's just ugly.
    My city has put several brutalist buildings under preservation order, and while I wouldn't mind those eyesores to disappear, that's exactly how baroque fans thought when they tore down gothic buildings so who knows, maybe the future will find some appreciation for those buildings.

    • @jeffreybarry4694
      @jeffreybarry4694 2 года назад +6

      Better yet, these buildings were quite possibly designed to be turned over to the army given a Red invasion. You’ll even see some have watch towers and gun holes. It’s harder to invade a country scattered with good forts.

    • @havingalook2
      @havingalook2 2 года назад +16

      ... so to us it's just ugly.
      With respect - You should speak for yourself. Your statement should have been ...so to me it's just ugly. The masses may not agree with you and as this item pointed out there are many, many around the world that are beautiful and even protected as wonderful examples that are very liveable. Simply Google something such as 'top ten brutalist buildings' and discover some that may even appeal to you. India has some beutiful ones, Brazil, Canada there is a lengthy list.

    • @johnhalat
      @johnhalat 2 года назад +8

      @@havingalook2 As a brazilian, Ive seen some. Horrible!

    • @tolli97
      @tolli97 2 года назад +20

      @@havingalook2 Studies have shown that the vast majority of people dislike brutalism

    • @rooneye
      @rooneye 2 года назад +1

      @@jeffreybarry4694 One is literally a battleship! 0:04!

  • @MarianelaGuzman
    @MarianelaGuzman 2 года назад +127

    We have many examples of brutalist architecture in Latin America as well. In Venezuela for instance (which is the perfect example for economic hardship and decay) a lot of cities were really developed during the mid century/ brutalist era. For instance, in Caracas you can see theaters, universities, government buildings, malls, museums and even housing in that style. One of my favorites is the Teresa Carreño Cultural Complex. Mexico is another country that comes to mind.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +5

      Thank you for sharing LATAM perspective! We've never been to Caracas so would really love one day to see the architecture there. Teresa Carreño Theater looks HUGE!

    • @86hongo
      @86hongo 2 года назад +8

      The Mexican colegio militar in Tlalpan is one beautiful example of Mexican brutalism, it even appeared in the total recall film :)

    • @RegenWayne
      @RegenWayne 2 года назад +3

      @@CuriousMuse It becomes even bigger when you take into account it was made as part of a complex; the Parque Central twin towers (Venezuela's tallest buildings), the Museum of Contemporary Arts, Los Caobos park and the whole Bellas Artes complex are mostly designed by Carlos Raúl Villanueva (One of Venezuela's most influential architects who had a strong brutalist phase).

    • @fszocelotl
      @fszocelotl 2 года назад +3

      @@86hongo Along with Infonavit HQ, Metro Chabacano, Metro Insurgentes, and I think Colegio de México.
      I'll add to the main examples of mexican brutalism the works of Abraham Zabludovsky, Teodoro Gonzalez de León, Pedro Ramírez Vazquez, Mario Pani and Felix Candela.

    • @accessenglish6461
      @accessenglish6461 2 года назад +2

      @@fszocelotl Would you say that the massive Aztec Stadium in Mexico City is brutalist?

  • @ClarkABennett
    @ClarkABennett 2 года назад +90

    As with any Architectural movement, there are good and bad designs, functional and well-engineered buildings, and those that should never have been approved. Brutalism, at its best, is a well-designed and engineered building that makes a stamp upon its environment and stands the test of time. At its worst, it is a dehumanizing crumbling eyesore.

  • @pulsarstargrave256
    @pulsarstargrave256 2 года назад +41

    "DYSTOPIAN" springs to mind as this style of architecture is often featured in movies set in a "dystopian" future; where authority and practicality have supplanted freedom and the Arts!

    • @carlpissatto1198
      @carlpissatto1198 2 года назад

      Its just Hollywood making their anti-communist propaganda

  • @PADARM
    @PADARM 2 года назад +129

    The problem, as you said it, is that many Brutalist Buildings are very poorly maintained or they were poorly built. but there are many, that are well preserved, and they are really pleasing to the eye.

    • @felipesanchez6178
      @felipesanchez6178 10 месяцев назад

      So glad you appreciate!

    • @miketackabery7521
      @miketackabery7521 10 месяцев назад +4

      I've never seen a brutalist building "pleasing to the eye". They're brutal. They're MEANT to be brutal. They brutalize the city they're built in. There's nothing warm and charming and beautiful and comforting about a brutalist building... because they're brutal.

    • @arixael4928
      @arixael4928 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@miketackabery7521 that's why is fascinating

  • @majdavojnikovic
    @majdavojnikovic 2 года назад +21

    Brutalist architecture ignores the street, and that is only thing I don't like about it. I like to look at it, visit it, but I would never live in such urban concept.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      So true. This urban concept sometimes ignores the people needs too :)

    • @tomburke5311
      @tomburke5311 2 года назад

      I'd live in The Barbican in a flash, if I could afford it; other brutalist buildings, not so much...

  • @007bistromath
    @007bistromath 2 года назад +34

    There are really cool looking brutalist buildings, but I usually only ever find them by looking stuff up myself. For some reason people who like brutalism always hold up the ugliest, most prison-like examples of brutalism as what makes it great.

  • @s.demchinsky7488
    @s.demchinsky7488 2 года назад +82

    As somebody who has owned a condominium in a Brutalist for over 3 decades I can attest to a certain practical nature of the form. However, that does not change the fact that Brutalist buildings are extremely ugly. As concrete ages, it just gets uglier and uglier.

    • @markrichards6863
      @markrichards6863 2 года назад +6

      Well, maybe there us a haunting beauty in the decay and like brick, concrete is porous and needs to be cleaned properly, and patched. I'm no expert but it seems there should be a way to seal concrete buildings. Like they do on concrete floors and counter tops, to prevent moisture from damaging it. The Coliseum in Rome is a concrete building. Should they tear it down because concrete is ugly? I live in NYC. Lots of brutalist buildings are very handsome. I M Pei could be considered a brutalist architect for a lot of his worknin the 70s. I think the term brutalist has a negative connotation, but if we explore a little deeper, we find that there are actually lots of design elements that we appreciate that we're featured in brutalist architecture. It's a bigger umbrella than what first comes to mind.

  • @Vancetizor29
    @Vancetizor29 2 года назад +9

    Here in the Philippines, there are a lot of Brutalist buildings here, most of them are still in use and the ageing made them more eye-catching.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +2

      What are the most famous buildings there?

    • @Vancetizor29
      @Vancetizor29 2 года назад +3

      @@CuriousMuse The most notable one is the Cultural Centre of the Philippines and the various school buildings in the University of the Philippines - Diliman Campus in Quezon City.
      Also the MWSS Building beside the UP - Diliman Campus, it is where the Balara Water Filtration plant is located.
      And further more of them, the Philippine Heart Centre in, again, Quezon City. The Department of Foreign Affairs building in Pasay, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas building in Manila and Quezon City.
      There are lots of those type of architecture here, and they are too many to mention.

    • @user-wf1bw3op1q
      @user-wf1bw3op1q Год назад

      @@Vancetizor29 Conex 2023 happened recently, and I finally saw CCP and how good it looks. Definitely an surreal experience.

  • @dreemdazer
    @dreemdazer 2 года назад +25

    Thanks for the great video! I watched it because I wanted to learn to appreciate the brutalist style in spite of the fact that I despise it. I tried but it didn’t work.
    While I can appreciate Brutalism on an intellectual level, and what the architects were trying to do, I can’t do so on an emotional level. It’s just so heavy, brooding, gray, cold and foreboding in style. (Brood-alism perhaps?)
    I don’t understand how it’s ‘honest’ in presentation to the material it is built with when the Romans built with it 2000 years ago and came up with something completely different. They created soaring spaces, arches and graceful structures full of natural light that inspire us still today. The Parthenon, for example. So I don’t believe it’s the material, it’s the style and presentation. You could also make heavy, thick, windowless structures out of logs, rock and metal that show their ‘honest’ characteristics, but that’s just one way of using and expressing those materials.
    I think Brutalism was an experiment in architecture that didn’t catch on or age well, but whose better examples should be preserved. We need to appreciate the thinking behind these structures while also making it less likely we will make these same architectural mistakes again.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +4

      +1 to preservation of the great examples and informing our future choices so we make less mistakes 👍🏻

  • @juniorjames7076
    @juniorjames7076 8 месяцев назад +4

    I grew up in the 80s New York City. My families originally lived in a very bad part of Brooklyn (Brownsville) until we moved to a bucolic tree-lined Long Island suburb. I remember across the street from our old building was a massive public school and housing complex, all built in the early 1970s in Brutalist/Futuristic style, and than decaying into a hellish, ghetto landscape. No Optimism. No Beauty. This is one art movement that I have no love for.

  • @odd-ysseusdoesstuff6347
    @odd-ysseusdoesstuff6347 2 года назад +9

    I’ve always had the idea of a design philosophy, a design derived from which where the artist was from, you can see that in many cultures throughout the world, for example,
    -Japan’s Traditional Homes are stilted, foundations on a curious incline, and made out of wood, which is to reflect their nature: Typhoons, Flooding, and in constant Earthquake
    -In South East Asia, in Stilted, mostly wood and rattan with high roofs are often used, as a way to, again reflect and protect themselves of their natural surroundings, Typhoons, Heavy winds, and floods,
    -In Greece, the open air, hardy foundation of their buildings reflect the humid climate of the region and their susceptibility to earthquakes, that is why most Traditional Greek Architecture is often small and compact, save their temples, palaces, and city centers, which often favour compact-ness and strength
    Brutalist Architecture, I think, although I’m not much of a fan reflects this idea, the warring and destructive nature of both the 1st and 2nd World Wars to an entire generation is devastating, to me, Brutalist Architecture reflect Order in Chaos, Protection and a Sturdy foundation against what they fear most: Themselves

  • @luizasr3495
    @luizasr3495 2 года назад +16

    A lot of university buildings of the 60/70 in public universities in Brazil are influenced by brutalism.

  • @penelopegreene
    @penelopegreene Год назад +4

    It's better than beautiful. IT'S METAL! Well, it's concrete, but it's METAL!!! 🎸

  • @GravityFromAbove
    @GravityFromAbove Год назад +4

    If the support for Brutalism comes largely from architects, this in itself makes the notion of 'saving' these buildings highly suspect. Architects, along with city planners, and the extremely corrupt construction industry, have a lot to answer for. They have ruined so many cities with their monuments to hubris and corporate feudalism. They have stripped cities of ornamentation and human scale buildings to create lovely crystalline visions to look down on from private jets. City after city falls to the inhumanity of the cult of architecture. So no, only save the most stark and frightening as reminders of the insanity of the 20th Century, and eliminate the rest, finding suitable uses for all of that concrete. The mantra, 'form follows function' is right up there with 'Arbeit macht frei' as a totalitarian axiom. (No apologies to Loos, Bauhaus, the International Style, and Postmodernism.)

    • @isaacxcii4289
      @isaacxcii4289 11 месяцев назад

      That's naïve: brutalism was developed in response to the fascist-nazi-stalinist monumentalism.

  • @yeager1957
    @yeager1957 2 года назад +16

    Brutalism will never not look soulless to me.

  • @amyvillanueva3442
    @amyvillanueva3442 2 года назад +7

    Many Brutalist buildings I noticed lack curves & arches and those do help make a building more cosy & comfortable. Also it wouldn't hurt to use more colors other than gray.

    • @ZenQuestOfficial
      @ZenQuestOfficial 10 месяцев назад

      Why is it so hard for everyone to just say CUBE SQUARE!! wtf!!

    • @arodvaz1955
      @arodvaz1955 9 месяцев назад

      Your comment made me aware that every brutalist building I like has some sort of curve or circle in it. Some of them are even designed taking into account the direction of the wind and angle of light.

  • @Luna-ej4mi
    @Luna-ej4mi Год назад +2

    Croat here, grew up in a brutalist apartment. It's cramped, and how the apartment was made, I had to share a room with my brother. I'm aware the outside of my apartment complex is not the prettiest, but it's a place I call home. And home it shall remain

  • @jeremyhennessee6604
    @jeremyhennessee6604 4 месяца назад

    this channel is absolutely amazing. The best educational, short-form content I've seen in regards to Art in a LONG time. if not EVER.

  • @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13
    @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13 2 года назад +6

    Life without industry is guilt, industry without art is brutality.

  • @hippiedadtx2878
    @hippiedadtx2878 2 года назад +3

    We have two examples of brutalism here in Fort Worth, Texas. Our city hall is one, and the Fort Worth Water Gardens is another. Part of the 1976 movie Logan's Run was filmed at the Water Gardens. The Fine Arts Building at the University of Texas at Arlington is another example close to Fort Worth.

  • @ETBrenner
    @ETBrenner 2 года назад +5

    I lived in Boston for a decade, and I confess I never loved the intensely brutalist design of its City Hall (several shots of which are featured in this video). The building, and the nigh-featureless plaza around it, are really jarring compared with the centuries-old buildings of the nearby neighborhoods. I understand it's acclaimed by architects, but IMO housing public governmental functions in a forbidding and inscrutable concrete fortress is simply not a good look.

  • @LeoiCaangWan
    @LeoiCaangWan 2 года назад +4

    Tadao Ando's Hill of the Buddha is my favourite example of modern brutalism.
    Bad brutalism is ugly, good brutalism is beautiful, unfortunately, Sturgeon's law holds true: '90% of anything is shit'.

  • @havingalook2
    @havingalook2 2 года назад +8

    Well done. Perhaps you should have showen more of the brilliant ones that do hold the publics favour to counter the negative view held by some concerning this architecture. I find many of the buildings around the world simply wonderful. The Robarts Library in Toronto, Ontairo, Canada is a very fine example of quite successful this architecture.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Thank you for sharing these fine examples 💪🏻

  • @katherinel3678
    @katherinel3678 2 года назад +4

    Please more architecture videos, love your videos. Great work

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Thank you 🌺 we have two more architectural episodes coming, stay tuned!

  • @samantaluna3870
    @samantaluna3870 Год назад +15

    I think brutalism can be very beautiful and calming if contrasted with lush landscape. I think a balance of nature and concrete is best for the architectural style.

  • @gridlock7425
    @gridlock7425 2 года назад +20

    Half the time the structures could use a serious power wash and their grounds tended and they'd be fine, but the neglect really highlights the negative aspects of the style.

  • @0Iive
    @0Iive 2 года назад +3

    I find it interesting how stark the divide in opinion is regarding brutalist architecture. For example, in 2001, The Barbican estate in London was given a grade two listing - and only two years later was named one of London ugliest buildings.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Indeed, we see it in the comments under this video too! 🙈 and what do you personally think of the Barbican estate?

    • @0Iive
      @0Iive 2 года назад

      @@CuriousMuse haha, I think it’s beautiful. I have a friend who lives there and we often eat at it’s restaurant outside, admiring the view! The Barbican conservatory is also magnificent and if I ever get married, I plan for it to be there.
      (Also, while I’ve got the chance, I’d like to say I love how diverse and varied your channel is :)

    • @CallmeLJ700
      @CallmeLJ700 2 года назад

      @@0Iive I personally don't understand why people think they are ugly

  • @baruchbenedikt2469
    @baruchbenedikt2469 10 месяцев назад +1

    Just found this channel and I am obsessed with it.
    Can you guys make videos of other architectural movements?

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  10 месяцев назад +1

      Of course! 😍 And welcome to our channel!

  • @cezote
    @cezote 2 года назад +2

    In Brazil, more specifically in the state of Rio de Janeiro, there are numerous buildings with a similar style. They are the CIEP ( CENTRO INTEGRADO DE EDUCAÇÃO PÚBLICA) In Igles CIEP ( INTEGRATED CENTER OF PUBLIC EDUCATION ) These standardized buildings were designed by the architect Oscar Niemeyer.

  • @MegaAwesomeNick
    @MegaAwesomeNick 2 года назад +22

    Brutalism also was intended to make an anti-nationalist statement. It was attempting to also stand in stark contrast to the ornate classical design that the nazis had coopted as their style. The style was bare and was meant to not have a national identity. Instead making an international style.

    • @Heligoland360
      @Heligoland360 2 года назад

      The Nazis also liked breathing, let's stop doing that as well.

    • @quagmoe7879
      @quagmoe7879 Год назад +1

      So it was also a way to try and take culture out of the equation? I think brutalism looks good personality but due to how concrete ages I think they could at least use a coat of paint. Paint murals on them or something. That could be an amazing blend of the old and the new.

    • @MKMousanz
      @MKMousanz Год назад +2

      @@quagmoe7879 It wasn't meant to take culture in itself, but rather make it a style for "human culture", if you believe such a thing can exist. As for painted-on brutalism, you should check out Mexican Brutalism. Specifically the works of Luis Barragán.

    • @cmbeadle2228
      @cmbeadle2228 Год назад +1

      I've never understand that motivation though: there's a lot of fascistic undertones to many of the big brutalist architects, which you can definitely see in, say, Brasilia

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@cmbeadle2228 I'm going to be honest. I grew up in the 80s, NYC. My families originally in a very bad part of Brooklyn (Brownsville) until we moved to a Long Island suburb. I remember across the street from our old building was a massive public school and housing complex, all built in the early 1970s in Brutalist/Futuristic style, and than decaying within a decade into a hellish, ghetto landscape. No Optimism. No Beauty. This is one art movement that I will never have love for.

  • @dimitriostsiganis
    @dimitriostsiganis 2 года назад +1

    3:40-41 brings back lots of memories.
    The Roger Stevens Building at the University of Leeds

  • @ferhatdogan4336
    @ferhatdogan4336 2 года назад +3

    Onenof my fav channels. Keep up the good stuff!

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Lovely to hear it 😍, thank you!

  • @monikovlogs8282
    @monikovlogs8282 Год назад +2

    Great video, this helps me to TRULY understand brutalist architecture. THANK YOUUU

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  Год назад +1

      Woohoo, so glad to hear it! 😍

  • @martinafernandezrovira121
    @martinafernandezrovira121 2 года назад +2

    Hi! I loved the video. I would like to see something about Frank Ghery, more specifically about the Guggenheim museum in Bilbao.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      We have a video on the channel titled “top 5 architects”, he’s one of them!

  • @arcticfoxvikingseaking2206
    @arcticfoxvikingseaking2206 Год назад +1

    Great video, fascinating. Iowa State even has some of these buildings that were designed as both bunkers and to break up riots. I don't love it, but some of the structures are rather interesting.

  • @nickbenton3545
    @nickbenton3545 2 года назад +2

    The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center is mostly brutalist. I grew up going to the Children’s Hospital in Oklahoma City on the OUHSC campus and I hated the style when I was young, but I worked at the OUHSC campus in adulthood and the addition of natural elements like vines and flowers has made me love them. Probably a combination of relatively recent changes and nostalgia.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Probably both indeed! ☺️

  • @almostacrone8046
    @almostacrone8046 2 года назад +15

    I think that we should always try to fix something before just replacing it. If part of the building is still viable then build around it. Keep the parts that work and fix or change the parts that don’t. Razing something to the ground because it is more convenient to is not ok. In Vancouver housing prices are so high that they demolish 5 year old house and make condominium’s.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      Indeed, this would give a 2nd chance to the building!

    • @peterbelanger4094
      @peterbelanger4094 2 года назад

      The problem with concrete, a lot of time the structure isn't viable, cracks form, water & ice get in, decay, corrosion, cheap ingredients, cheap contractors, lazy inspectors.....

    • @doodledangernoodle2517
      @doodledangernoodle2517 9 месяцев назад

      That’s what I wish they had done with the Richfield Tower in Los Angeles. It was a gorgeous and intricate black and gold art deco building that was demolished. I wish they had at least salvaged a lot of the terra cotta and gold elements to incorporate into a new building

  • @yo.gui.youtube
    @yo.gui.youtube 10 месяцев назад

    cool videos! is the curious muse the one who shows up on the zoom screen?

  • @dudinjka
    @dudinjka 2 года назад +3

    Brutalism moved in jewelry design in 1970s, mostly by german designers. Those pieces are very large and bulky, but at the same time very sensual. I can say the same about architectural design. Infact, I grew up in one of those buildings and it's still standing🙂!

  • @Unownshipper
    @Unownshipper 2 года назад +3

    While I don't love all Brutalist buildings, I appreciate the movement and will always defend it. Nowadays when so many buildings are nondescript, amorphous, or unoriginal glass blocks that simply blend into the sky, I long for the warmth and character of stone structures. Diversity in a city's architecture is something to be celebrated. It shows history, change, and variety of thought, so give Brutalism some love.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      ❤️ to diversity of architecture

  • @DiamandaHagan
    @DiamandaHagan 2 года назад +4

    The cathedral in Tokyo is an amazing piece of brutalist architecture.

  • @joanelizabethhall9455
    @joanelizabethhall9455 2 года назад +3

    There is a classically Brutalist house a block from me. At first I thought it hadn't been finished, but it was. I've tried my best to like it, but I'm not doing too well. I think silly things each day when I drive past it, like "Maybe if he put some pretty curtains up", but of course that would ruin it as a piece of Brutalist architecture.

  • @archwaldo
    @archwaldo 2 года назад +1

    Unité has been my spirit building since i was in architecture school. I absolutely admire how Corbi flexed his space planning abilities to design that baby.
    Corridors only at every three floors. THREE FLOORS!

  • @Dev1nci
    @Dev1nci 2 года назад +2

    I like good examples of Brutalism like the Barbican. I think a lot of people hate Brutalism because they think of it in terms of ‘were a city to have one style would this be appropriate?’ however Brutalism can often be understood by looking at it against its context and by looking at it’s sculptural quality, like a building hewn out of a massive rock.
    The problem with the style is that it’s VERY powerful so if you get it wrong then it’s overpowering.

  • @joseluisnietoenriquez6122
    @joseluisnietoenriquez6122 6 месяцев назад +1

    If the problem is the bare concrete, just paint it. The grey color is probably a reminder of autumn season, and that can be instinctively sad for some people. In Mexico we had an architect called Agustin Hernandez, who merged these brutalist tendencies with ancient architecture by the mayans and aztecs, giving his pieces a deeper feeling and meaning, something that other mexican architects also developed, and we appreciate those landmarks to these days.

  • @tintinhickey5869
    @tintinhickey5869 Год назад +1

    I couldn’t find the entrance to one Brutalist building here in Australia that I gave up …. also one of the buildings, our Art Gallery no less,
    had to have the entrance repositioned because it too was so hard for visitors to find …

  • @darianwilliams6018
    @darianwilliams6018 2 года назад +1

    The moving visual effect at 0:54 display an understandable representation of what brutalism in architecture is represented as. I now imagine the correlation of hard and deeply processed materials that come from within the Earth, being stacked on top of the earth; glorifying innate characteristics of our planet by allowing all to empirically understand what was not previously understood.

    • @ItsNeverTooHot4Leather
      @ItsNeverTooHot4Leather 2 года назад

      Or, perhaps it illustrates how all humans on this planet fail to understand anything at all...demonstrating our own brutishness.

  • @Autofill120
    @Autofill120 2 года назад +3

    Brutalism was also very big in Latin America; there are a lot of examples in Mexico and Colombia. In Mexico, which is a socialist democratic country, it was taken as a way to develop cheap and lasting urbanization projects spanning from public hospitals, to apartment buildings and museums. This lasted a few decades all the way to the late 80's.

  • @eliasr2727
    @eliasr2727 2 года назад +1

    Im from Germany and the Townhall from my home City Aalen is brutalist. In the ladt years we had a discussion about whether to renovate or to torn down the Building. Im glad that they will renovate in the future

  • @English_kufa
    @English_kufa 2 года назад +1

    Great job , new information

  • @Roxor128
    @Roxor128 6 месяцев назад +1

    I think a lot of the derision for brutalism comes from the fact that it's just simply a difficult style to do well. Put a top-notch architect on the project and they'll give you gold. Put a lesser one on the project and you'll get depressing or ugly. Do the same with a glass-box project and the worst you'll get is something inoffensive.

  • @lidiaadobato7822
    @lidiaadobato7822 Год назад +2

    In Buenos Aires, Argentina, we have the Bank of London and the National Library, both designed by Arq. Clorindo Testa in the brutalist style. They're not beautiful but they're functional.

  • @RavenclawFtW3295
    @RavenclawFtW3295 2 года назад +64

    Brutalism: a cold clump of shapes and lines. It's purpose is pure function. No beauty, or meaning. It's just there.

    • @paulburns1333
      @paulburns1333 2 года назад +7

      Spot on. Unfortunately.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +2

      Great summary 👍🏻

    • @goncalodias6402
      @goncalodias6402 Год назад +3

      its putpose is not pure function. otherwise they would choose the most simple forms and not those crazy sculptural shapes.
      the biggest myth in architecture is form follows function, they all say it, but end up designing whatever they want

    • @lonepaladin388
      @lonepaladin388 Год назад +1

      And that's what I love about it

    • @ZenQuestOfficial
      @ZenQuestOfficial 10 месяцев назад

      what do you mean "shapes and lines"??? Wtf?? How fcking difficult is it to say: SQUARE or BOX or fucking CUBE???!!

  • @FilipiVianna
    @FilipiVianna 6 месяцев назад +1

    Nice video. I've just miss some mention of brutalism in Brazil. Most of the country capital city architectural style is brutalism.

  • @Danni611
    @Danni611 2 года назад +1

    I work at Nuneaton Library in the UK. I have used Blender to recreate the building as I think it will be torn down after we get our new building. My hope is to have a 3d version for the public to see after it has gone, as many locals consider it to be an iconic building in the town and have campaigned to get it registered as a listed building to no avail. My mum was a small child when it was built and she thought it was the most futuristic thing she had ever seen back in the 60s. It was designed by Frederick Gibberd. As someone who found this type of architecture depressing and hideous, I have developed an appreciation for it as I have recreated it in minute detail. I have also seen photos of how it looked in the 60s and I love his use of natural light and how he considered the space around the building to be as important as the building itself. A local MP said it looked like a soviet style car park, and although I agree, I have grown to love it and will miss it when it is gone. I won't miss the leaks though. Concrete doesn't age well.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      We’ve just checked out Nuneaton Library 📚 - it actually looks nice! Is it certain it will be gone?

    • @Danni611
      @Danni611 2 года назад

      The fate of the building hasn't been talked about much but the area is being redeveloped, including the roads and surrounding buildings. The ones next to us will be pulled down and that's where the new library will go. Agreed, it is kind of nice. The original interior was beautiful. It is a shame most of the arch windows have been covered up and lots of interior features were altered over time. It would be nice to recreate the original interior if I get the chance.

  • @luciachavez5737
    @luciachavez5737 2 года назад +1

    Me encantan estos videos son muy claros.😺
    Me gustaria un video sobre el "abstract expressionism" por favor.😸

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching! Great idea for our next video 👍🏻

  • @deraykrause4517
    @deraykrause4517 2 года назад +5

    Some of those with the odd shapes look really cool, but the boring tower ones remind me of that awful 432 Park Ave piece of crap. I think it would be fun to build a brutalist mansion in a fancy part of town, just to piss off all the neighbors.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      Lol, right on the Billionaire's Row! 🤣

  • @cinefreak2307
    @cinefreak2307 2 года назад +2

    Some of those architectural monstrosities could have passed as secret police HQs. The rest just remind me of student dorms in the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

  • @skygrey4867
    @skygrey4867 2 года назад +1

    I’d like you guys to talk about Iceberg architecture style in next episodes ! Appreciate it so much !

  • @artwerksDallas
    @artwerksDallas 2 года назад +1

    Major cities in Texas use this style of architecture for city buildings such as libraries and city halls. Dallas Ft Worth Arlington

  • @danielholman7866
    @danielholman7866 2 года назад +4

    Dallas Texas grew in a big way in the 1960’s and 1970’s. The entire metro area is lousy with Brutalism. I get that there needs to be preservation. But I wouldn’t be sad to see many examples replaced.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      Didn’t know that the entire metro area in Dallas is full of brutalism - thanks for sharing this fact

  • @Kr4r4
    @Kr4r4 2 года назад +2

    I love this kind of building! I didn't know it had a name. Thank you for the video!

  • @accessenglish6461
    @accessenglish6461 2 года назад +1

    I first saw brutalist architecture in the movie Total Recall with Schwarzenegger running around Mexico City.

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt 5 месяцев назад +1

    Well, I love Brutalism! People call it inhumane and depressing, but nothing depresses me more than seeing people being happy about things that
    I don't like, and I don't like "happy" architecture. Brutalist buildings are not happy buildings, but that's also why they make me happy.
    I suppose if people painted them in bright colours, they'd be more accepting of them, but that would rob them of all their oppressive charm!

  • @huajie666liu8
    @huajie666liu8 Год назад +4

    They look beautiful.

  • @eliosalomon6233
    @eliosalomon6233 2 года назад +1

    Concrete still one of the most durable material to build, all the new material which appeared in the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21th are way more expensive to keep in shape during time...

  • @drakedrones
    @drakedrones 2 года назад +2

    If concrete defines brutalist architecture, then I must say, it’s one my most fav material. Just simple clean canvas when done right.

  • @shannonl8014
    @shannonl8014 2 года назад +12

    Before watching this clip, I definetly wasn't a fan of brutalist architecture. I perceived them as cold, and unappealing, like mentioned in the clip. However, when learning about the concept of "honesty derived from it's form and material" it opened a new perspective. And I grew an appreaciation for these buildings, although I still think they look cold at first sight. It was also interesting to see how brutalism developed and evolved, as well as its comeback. I hope with its comeback, people also think about ways about maintaining these buildings.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад +1

      Wonderful, glad to hear we offered a new perspective 👍🏻. We agree these buildings can look cold at first sight

    • @mondkalb9813
      @mondkalb9813 2 года назад +2

      I gather it is not by chance that so many dystopian movies choose brutalistic architecture as background.
      In my city we are plagued by a monumental (decaying) residential block from the early 70s. It really is an abomination. It has been sold many times to "investors" who did of course nothing of the sort. Many people still live in there and/or own appartments. But really noone wants to go through the basement car park at night. Perfect setting for a splatter movie. :D

    • @ryanglaser5336
      @ryanglaser5336 2 года назад

      While good to be occupied and still exist, it is unfortunate that one of the recent owners of former 1960s IBM campus TREX in Boca Raton FL decided to seal & paint all of the concrete structure. A part of the brutal honesty has been lost and a new added expense of forever maintenance will be repainting.

    • @seeker3507
      @seeker3507 2 года назад +2

      @@CuriousMuse The fact that you call brutalism honest is an insane propaganda-tier white washing of an ugly art style, adopted by the same people who made modern art a thing. You sir neither have taste, nor honesty. Go white wash your repulsive art elsewhere. It is fine to be forced to use cheap materials. Steering into the ugly and voluntarily picking the right amount of features with building material to maximize the ugly is unacceptible. choosing to perpetuate this art style by choice is even worse.

    • @goncalodias6402
      @goncalodias6402 Год назад

      the honesty in architecture is a myth
      if they were trying to be honest about the function of the building they would make the simplest building fit to that function, not those sculptural overlaping cubes and cantilevers.
      beware of most architectural philosophy, its mostly bullshit and never corresponds to whats built

  • @ashleyhamman
    @ashleyhamman 2 года назад +3

    Brutalism seems very hit or miss. However I think the context and purpose in which they were built has proved to be almost as important as the design itself. The Barbican is a center of arts and community, and was designed meticulously, despite it's flaws. This contrasts deeply with the Balfron Tower and Pruitt Igoe, which weren't really invested in for the long term in the same way, and seemed to have been a case of "build our problems away", without having the same level of care and budget put into them.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      So true! PS. By the way, Balfron Tower has just got an upgrade! 💪🏻

  • @gregorystiller975
    @gregorystiller975 2 месяца назад +1

    As in every architectural style,there are good and not so good examples. As this documentary states the style really involved civic architecture as well as postwar modernism. I think Brutalist benefitted from sculptural elements that certainly had an elevated beauty.
    Unfortunately because it was an affordable way of creating buildings, there was skimming on quality of the construction at times. I’m from Montreal, my city went through a massive 60s boom of concrete structures. Unfortunately when the Italian mafia is involved with the business of concrete, you have structures that will fall over in 30 years. However, some of the most architecturally, interesting and beautiful buildings in my city are of the brutalist modernist style.

  • @visrupt
    @visrupt 11 месяцев назад +1

    Ever since I was a child, I've always appreciated the look of just wood and bare concrete. I watched both our houses as it were built from start to finish, and I've shared my ideas with my father, but coming from a child he found it silly. The look, the smell, the feeling when you're inside a room and all you can see is wood and concrete, it's something.

  • @quangngo1329
    @quangngo1329 2 года назад +1

    The university near my house was somewhat loosely built in brutalism style, just like many old buildings were built in the same era in my city. I grown up seeing it fine structure and intimidating form and yet I don't know why I still love it. Unfortunately it was tore down and rebuilt, the same fate as it "peers". After playing the game Control made be Remedy, I was madly in love and addicted to brutalist architecture.

  • @erenjinchuriki
    @erenjinchuriki 2 месяца назад +1

    For me, and I guess it’s how it was intended, brutalist architecture only works visually when there are many people in the frame to bring color and life into the picture. That’s why they look so depressing in pictures solely showcasing the buildings.

  • @the_defaultguy
    @the_defaultguy Год назад +1

    no wonder i loved the first The maze runner movie
    its those gigantic concrete...everywhere

  • @silvertbird1
    @silvertbird1 2 года назад +5

    Excellent video, I learned much. Regrettably I find brutalist buildings quite hideous, both in the abstract and in the concrete. There are far too many other more beautiful architectural styles to waste time on such nonsense as this.

  • @azmodanpc
    @azmodanpc 2 года назад +2

    Dystopian would be a nice adjective.

  • @TheOis1984
    @TheOis1984 2 года назад +3

    this style is so depression-inducing. imagine driving through a road with raw concrete, massive, somber-colored buildings left and right, and the climate of the city is like that of London's where it's cloudy/gloomy most of the time. sucks the joy of living for sure

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      😬

    • @Judah132
      @Judah132 2 года назад +1

      That's basically one of my dreams, where I was driving through a road with symmetrical brutalist buildings (they had proportions similar to a hammer) and afterwards I was going to a local park that was also filled with overly sized brutalist monuments, however that park itself looked very scruffy.

    • @annasolovyeva1013
      @annasolovyeva1013 Месяц назад

      You guys are all talking about how a lot of Former Soviet Union is. Moscow has 90 sunny days a year, Saint Petersburg - 60. Even baroque looks dark and gloomy here

  • @thomasmccabe6690
    @thomasmccabe6690 2 года назад +3

    The best examples of Brutalism should be saved. I think many Soviet Era monuments are great examples and should be saved

  • @markrichards6863
    @markrichards6863 2 года назад +3

    I think it's like a lot of other architectural movements. There are great brutalist buildings and bad ones. I like it generally because I favor things that are heavily textured. I used to work across the street from Boston City Hall , thought it was a great looking building. There are lots of good examples. I wonder if there's going to be a neobrutalist movement at some point. As for brutalist preservation, I say take it case by case. Some of these buildings are preservation worthy, but others deserve a date with the wrecking ball. I know of one church that was poorly constructed and had to be closed, due to chunks of concrete falling, a real safety hazard. It was a cool space, had aluminum benches for pews, and a huge skylight shaped like a dove. The acoustics were amazing in there, but at the end of the day it wad a poorly executed design.

  • @sophiejones3554
    @sophiejones3554 2 года назад +3

    I think this is not an either/or question. As with any style there are the good examples and the…not so great examples.
    Where brutalism is concerned, the difference mostly comes down to one key point which applies to architecture in general: *all architecture is local.*
    At it’s best, brutalism embraces this fact: the building literally made from the ground it is built on, sitting in the contours of the landscape or cityscape like a tattoo. It echoes it’s surroundings in it’s shapes, and how it manipulates the light. It will deliberately play with the boundary between building and garden: bringing the outside in and the inside out. Although monumental it will be as visually deceptive as the best cathedrals: seeming suspended from the heavens above the earth rather than dropped upon it to oppress it.
    At the worst, brutalist buildings are like monumental glacial erratics: alien presences haphazardly deposited in otherwise cohesive landscapes and cityscapes. Monuments to human arrogance, and insults to their locations. When they do not synchronize with their location: they can be symbols of outside imposition. Like an obelisk uprooted from it’s home and dragged to a conquering capital.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Fantastic contribution to this discussion- thank you for sharing your point of view. We agree that location helps to make sense of the structure as it provides a lot of context

  • @DK-ue5ks
    @DK-ue5ks 2 года назад +1

    People who played the video game Control, will know this style. It made new people realize the style is beautiful.

  • @minnesotamonk
    @minnesotamonk 10 месяцев назад +1

    The most beautiful Brutalist building I have encountered is the St. John's Abbey Church in Collegeville, Minnesota with its breathtaking brutalist honeycomb stained glass window that covers the entire north facade of the church...

  • @opwave79
    @opwave79 Год назад +1

    There’s a Brutalist building in my former university that everyone thought was fugly. Interestingly enough it housed the biotech department.

  • @felipesanchez6178
    @felipesanchez6178 10 месяцев назад +1

    I find it chic - a bold statement of simplicity. Stylish and daring at the same time.. It should DEFINITELY be preserved!!!

  • @ogarcia515
    @ogarcia515 11 месяцев назад +1

    I don't mind concrete architecture as long as it's well designed. Design redeems it.

  • @son-of-a-Haitian
    @son-of-a-Haitian Год назад +1

    Thanks to the narrator for giving us a few antonyms for ugly: sculptural massive, rigid, stripped down, blunt, rough, lifeless monochrome. All the buildings were designed to be utilitarian. They were made to make an impression but they are lifeless monstrosities. Now people want to preserve the history of ugliness and venerate them? Most people do not want to near nor in them. The buildings are oppressive to humanity. People want to fellowship. They want to commune. At least the design for a sports stadium or a casino is more honest than le béton brut. Any frivolous distraction is lost upon the fanatic.

  • @Pumpkin.Escobar13
    @Pumpkin.Escobar13 2 года назад +1

    My elementary school and the county government building where I lived in NY were designed in this style by the architect, Paul Rudolph.
    Both were built in the 60s and both are no longer there.

    • @CuriousMuse
      @CuriousMuse  2 года назад

      Great examples, thanks for sharing! 🙏🏻

  • @erinrenman1479
    @erinrenman1479 2 года назад +1

    I think that architects and other defenders of the Brutalist style generally do a very poor job of responding to criticisms and distaste from the general public. When the reaction to a piece of art is, "How ugly, how cold, how inhuman, how dystopian" responding by pointing out things like artistic appreciation for the form if you're familiar with X, Y, Z....is not really a good response. It makes people feel like they're being looked down on for not "getting it". Advocates of Brutalism need to look at their messaging and communication if they want to convince people of its worth, because as is a lot of the messaging sidesteps addressing what it is people are reacting negatively to

  • @SquizzMe
    @SquizzMe 2 года назад +12

    There's an unsettling beauty to brutalism. You don't know if it's a house or a prison.

    • @marketeagle4508
      @marketeagle4508 Год назад +1

      You have articulated it perfectly. I thought it was beautiful although it may tend to look rough, edgy, geometric, and have that dominant brute feel to it (It has its charms). From the outside, you cannot help but wonder what's inside. It looks a bit claustrophobic especially because of the sparse windows and the thick look to it. Also, it has that mystique that there might be some covert operations or secret organization inside, or it could be a bunker or a fallout shelter. Lmao!

  • @josepastrana2628
    @josepastrana2628 Год назад +2

    We can preserve one or two, as reminder of the ugly rubbish we allowed architects to build in the 50s -you know; so we never forget and never do it again

  • @DH-ex4nv
    @DH-ex4nv 2 года назад +5

    I feel more cultured already!

  • @MikkelKjrJensen
    @MikkelKjrJensen 2 года назад +8

    I find that well done Brutalist architecture can have a stark and calming beauty. They often lack busy ornamentation instead focusing on large unadorned surfaces.

  • @stevenwilgus5422
    @stevenwilgus5422 2 года назад +2

    You can begin to understand, broadly speaking, that we are close to the collapse of civilization when we are facing a scarcity of sand to form concrete. (SAND for God's sake)