Raw Concrete: The Beauty of Brutalism
Material type:
- 9780434022441
- ARCH CAL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Arthshila Ahmedabad Cluster: 3J | ARCH/CAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | BK00798 |
Raw Concrete overturns the perception of Brutalist buildings as the penny-pinching, utilitarian products of dutiful social concern. Instead it looks a little closer, uncovering the luxuriously skilled craft and daring engineering with which the best buildings of the 1960s came into being: magnificent architectural visions serving clients rich and poor, radical and conservative. Beginning in a tiny hermitage on the remote north Scottish coast, and ending up backstage at the National Theatre, Raw Concrete embarks on a wide-ranging journey through Britain over the past sixty years, stopping to examine how eight extraordinary buildings were made - from commission to construction - why they have been so vilified, and why they are beginning to be loved. In it, Barnabas Calder puts forward a powerful case: Brutalism is the best architecture there has ever been, and perhaps the best there ever will be.