courtesy Paul Riddle/VIEW
Brutalism is coming in from the cold thanks to the efforts of Peter Chadwick and photographer Nicholas Grospierre. The two enthusiasts for all things concrete are behind "This Brutal World" and "Modern Forms: A Subjective Atlas of 20th-Century Architecture", photobooks capturing the divisive movement in all its monolithic glory. Pictured is Pierresvives, Montpellier by Zaha Hadid Architects (2012). Chadwick argues that contemporary architects continue to emulate the aesthetic first pioneered by Le Corbusier in the 1940s.
Courtesy University of California, San Diego
For "This Brutal World" Chadwick, who started as an architecture blogger, sourced monochrome images from a variety of photographers to form his compendium. He says that black and white photography lends itself well to capturing Brutalist buildings, emphasizing the strong shapes it became known for.
Coutesy GAPP Architects
The rapid development of concrete engineering in the mid-twentieth century allowed architects to craft increasingly outrageous designs for even the most perfunctory of buildings, such as the Grand Central Water tower, with its vertical cantilever structure.
Nicolas Grospierre
Warsaw resident Grospierre sourced many of his 200 Modernist buildings in Poland and the former Eastern Bloc. Many of the Brutalist works that feature were "large-scale housing estates done very cheaply," he says, a factor that has contributed to their poor condition today.
BenjaminAntony Monn/ARTUR IMAGES
Designed by Louis Khan, the Salk Institute is another example of large-scale public Brutalism. Commissioned by Dr Jonas Salk, the creator of the polio vaccine, and intended for use as a Biology department, Khan took the concrete boulevard and angled the blocks' windows to face the altogether softer sight of the Pacific Ocean.
Nicolas Grospierre
Grospierre says he was drawn to Modern buildings partly because of their state of disrepair. They are "the embodiment of an idea of progress -- a certain type of progress -- abandoned over 30 years ago."
Matteo Rossi/ARTUR IMAGES
Chadwick argues that Rem Koolhaas' De Rotterdam is another example of contemporary architecture riffing on aesthetics more than half a century old. In essence, he says a Brutalist building is one "avoiding unnecessary details... with a strong form and a lot of straight lines and faceless facades... It's bold, it's domineering; it's an indication that it's aesthetically different with it's surroundings."
Nicolas Grospierre
The structure of "Modern Forms" is dictated by the buildings featured. Grospierre has curated a gradual blend, each building bearing similar properties to those around it, the effect reinforcing the ties that bind a global, century-spanning movement.
Nicolas Grospierre
Raw concrete, or "beton brut" found its way into many other Modern -- though not ostensibly Brutalist -- buildings, such as the columns of the Tehran City Theatre. The capital of Iran's most iconic building also draws upon concrete engineering: the Azadi Tower may be clad in marble, but underneath is tons of the stuff.
Nicolas Grospierre
Grospierre manages to sandwich obscure, UFO-shaped buildings such as the Institute of Scientific Research and Development in Kiev, between builds in Iran and Poland. The authors suggests imposing works such as the Institute must toe a certain line with their surrounding, saying "it's a question of weight [and] of the visual impact the work produces."
Courtesy Bunker Arquitectura
Chadwick suggests Brutalist buildings have theatrical qualities to them -- perhaps why the style lends itself so well to public and ceremonial buildings, such as the Sunset Chapel in Mexico. A rectilinear boulder dropped among forest greenery, from the inside it makes maximum use of the stunning vistas around it.
Nicolas Grospierre
Grospierre discovered similar concrete monoliths in Poland. He argues that whilst Modernism was underpinned by a "social program", Brutalism was "simply taking advantage of concrete technology" -- the type of technology that was able to create the vast curves and gravity-defying forms like those of the Sanctuary of the Divine Mercy.
Courtesy Justo Garciá Rubio
Casar de Cáceres Bus Station, Cáceres, Spain, 2003
Phaidon
Trans World Airlines (TWA) Terminal, JFK Airport, New York, New York, USA, 1962 by Eero Saarinen and Associates
CNN  — 

And in the fifth decade of Modernism Le Corbusier said “Let there be concrete”: and there was Brutalism.

Well, perhaps not quite. However the Swiss-French polymath certainly kick-started what became the most divisive school of architecture in the twentieth century. His buildings from the late 1940s onwards paved the way for a new brand of Modernism, employing “beton brut”, raw, unfinished concrete set in bold, geometric forms. Form followed function and the result was monolithic, imposing and disruptive.

Brutalism had its admirers, but there were detractors, a group whose voice swelled down the years as buildings fell into disrepair and the aesthetic became a byword for poverty, antisocial behavior and poor urban planning. Some buildings are now living on the brink; others are have already been demolished.

But whisper it quietly: Brutalism is having a moment.

New buildings on the block

Peter Chadwick and Nicolas Grospierre are two authors waving the flag for these hunks of concrete. Chadwick’s “This Brutal World” focuses solely on the aesthetic, whilst Grospierre’s photobook “Modern Forms: A Subjective Atlas of 20th-Century Architecture” covers Brutalism in a wider context of nearly 200 buildings.

What both have done is sought beauty where many forgot it could be found. From residential towers in St Petersburg to chapels in Acapulco, Chadwick and Grospierre have illustrated the global reach of beton brut. Surprisingly, it’s a canon that continues to grow according to Chadwick.

“When we sat down to talk about the book we looked at the more historic architecture within the canon of Brutalism,” he says, referring to his publisher Phaidon. “But we also looked at how contemporary architects were visually inspired by the elder Brutalist buildings.”

BenjaminAntony Monn/ARTUR IMAGES
Salk Institute, La Jolla, California, USA by Louis Kahn (1965).

That’s why you’ll find new builds from OMA and Zaha Hadid’s Pierresvives (2012) in his volume. “Her structures were underpinned with some very raw concrete features… there was a strong link to be made and we wanted to represent that in the book,” Chadwick argues.

Photographer Grospierre chose to look for gems in Poland and the former Eastern Bloc, among 20 countries featured in “Modern Forms”. “There was this sense of discovery with completely unknown architecture,” he recalls. “By accident I stumbled across some quite extraordinary examples from late Modernism.”

Rather than plot his findings on a timeline, Grospierre has chosen to place his photography on something akin to an aesthetic continuum, matching the succeeding building to the shape and style of that which precedes it. The result is a globe-hopping journey of domes into triangles, triangles into cubes, cubes into asymmetrical roofs and so on, each building leeching on those around it.

The osmosis-like layout of “Modern Forms” reinforces the ties that bind the school of architecture. “This Brutal World” however relies on monochrome images to link the works of numerous photographers.

Luckily Brutalist buildings look great in black and white, says Chadwick. “You get a very strong sense of shape, composition… it’s all about light and shadow. When you look at the National Theatre on the Southbank on a sunny day, when you see the shadows it’s just incredible. It’s like architectural theater, and that’s only enhanced by black and white.”

A movement not without its problems

Neither Grospierre nor Chadwick shy away from explaining why Brutalism gets its bad rep. Moreover, they both suggest criticism levied against the aesthetic is often valid. Not all Brutalist creations were made equal, they suggest, and for every great building there was another ready to undermine the movement.

Brutalism’s functionality made it the perfect fit for cash-strapped post-war Europe, seeking to rebuild urban centres for swelling populations. It became the aesthetic of choice for many low-cost housing projects and in Western Europe Brutalism became a symbol of poverty. In Eastern Europe this was compounded; elision between projects and the governments that commissioned them often precluded appreciation of Brutalism’s merits.

“A lot of post-war developments were really badly designed and badly maintained housing estates,” says Chadwick. Grospierre concurs, reflecting that in Poland there are numerous “large-scale housing estates done very cheaply.”

“Flats, many stories up, don’t have direct access to outside space, so the ‘outside’ is on the ground level,” Chadwick explains. “There’s these negative, redundant spaces around the building, which prompts anti-social behavior. Brutalism has suffered because of this.”

Then there is the perception that these vast walls of unfinished concrete “can feel a bit like a playground bully,” says Chadwick. “I think it’s a question of weight,” argues Grospierre, “of the visual impact that the work produces.” And when the balance tips too far towards incongruity, critics will weigh in.

Grospierre suggests that at the heart of the matter is the problem that “Brutalism is more of an aesthetic choice, rather than programmatic… I think Modernism has this social program which Brutalism does not, per se.” And so whilst Grospierre sees Modernism as a utopian project, “the embodiment of an idea of progress – a certain type of progress – abandoned over 30 years ago,” Brutalism is “simply taking advantage of concrete technology.”

An unlikely revival

Perhaps paradoxically, Chadwick suggests that “concrete is delicate.” In “This Brutal World” he cites Ivan Locke, a character played by Tom Hardy in the film “Locke” (2013), who describes concrete as “delicate as blood.” Meanwhile “High-Rise” (2016), an adaptation of JG Ballard’s novel by director Ben Wheatley, is bringing Brutalism back into popular culture.

So is it cool to like these buildings once more?

“I think it is, yes,” says Grospierre. Chadwick agrees. Perhaps they’re not the most unbiased opinions to reach out for, but there’s an overarching reason, the latter suggests.

Bs0u10e0/Flickr
Birmingham Central Library, England. Much-maligned in its time, demolition crews moved in just as a new wave of fans began touting its credentials.

“I think people of my age have this nostalgic response to Brutalism that takes them back to my childhood,” he says. Chadwick, in his forties, is a child from the same era as Ballard’s “High-Rise”, when the concrete was freshly-set and damp-free. Now people of the same age are watching relics of their childhood crumble and moulder.

For Grospierre it is part of their appeal, in that “somehow the state of these buildings are a good representation of [the failure of progress].” Chadwick however looks on with horror.

“Unfortunately it’s a lot more expensive to preserve the buildings than to knock them down and build something else in their place,” he explains.

“[Brutalism] is definitely having its moment, which is great. I just hope it continues, the interest and the preservation of buildings, before we lose any more.”

“Modern Forms: A Subjective Atlas of 20th-Century Architecture” by Nicholas Grospierre is published by Prestel; “This Brutal World” by Peter Chadwick is published by Phaidon. Both are out now.