A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Brutalist Architecture explores the most polarizing architectural movement of the 20th century, tracing how raw concrete became both a symbol of utopian progress and dystopian nightmare. From Le Corbusier's post-war housing blocks to London's Barbican Estate and Boston's infamous City Hall, this book reveals how Brutalism emerged from socialist ideals and wartime pragmatism to create some of the world's most debated buildings. With the "gritty wit" of "a documentary narrated by a sarcastic architect," it chronicles the movement's global spread from British "streets in the sky" to Japanese Metabolist megastructures, Eastern Bloc monuments, and tropical concrete curves in Brazil and Bangladesh.

The story doesn't end with Brutalism's 1990s fall from grace-when stained concrete and broken dreams made these buildings synonymous with urban decay and dystopian sci-fi. Instead, it captures the movement's surprising 21st-century revival, driven by Instagram aesthetics, luxury loft conversions, and a new generation of architects embracing neo-Brutalist honesty. Perfect for design rebels, urban explorers, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that intimidating concrete tower is a masterpiece or an eyesore, this book argues that Brutalism's raw emotional power and uncompromising truthfulness may be exactly what our sanitized digital age needs-even if we're still not sure we like looking at it.

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A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Brutalist Architecture explores the most polarizing architectural movement of the 20th century, tracing how raw concrete became both a symbol of utopian progress and dystopian nightmare. From Le Corbusier's post-war housing blocks to London's Barbican Estate and Boston's infamous City Hall, this book reveals how Brutalism emerged from socialist ideals and wartime pragmatism to create some of the world's most debated buildings. With the "gritty wit" of "a documentary narrated by a sarcastic architect," it chronicles the movement's global spread from British "streets in the sky" to Japanese Metabolist megastructures, Eastern Bloc monuments, and tropical concrete curves in Brazil and Bangladesh.

The story doesn't end with Brutalism's 1990s fall from grace-when stained concrete and broken dreams made these buildings synonymous with urban decay and dystopian sci-fi. Instead, it captures the movement's surprising 21st-century revival, driven by Instagram aesthetics, luxury loft conversions, and a new generation of architects embracing neo-Brutalist honesty. Perfect for design rebels, urban explorers, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that intimidating concrete tower is a masterpiece or an eyesore, this book argues that Brutalism's raw emotional power and uncompromising truthfulness may be exactly what our sanitized digital age needs-even if we're still not sure we like looking at it.

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A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

by KJ Smith

Narrated by Digital Voice Madison G

Unabridged — 2 hours, 11 minutes

A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

A Brief History of Brutualist Architecture

by KJ Smith

Narrated by Digital Voice Madison G

Unabridged — 2 hours, 11 minutes

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Overview

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Brutalist Architecture explores the most polarizing architectural movement of the 20th century, tracing how raw concrete became both a symbol of utopian progress and dystopian nightmare. From Le Corbusier's post-war housing blocks to London's Barbican Estate and Boston's infamous City Hall, this book reveals how Brutalism emerged from socialist ideals and wartime pragmatism to create some of the world's most debated buildings. With the "gritty wit" of "a documentary narrated by a sarcastic architect," it chronicles the movement's global spread from British "streets in the sky" to Japanese Metabolist megastructures, Eastern Bloc monuments, and tropical concrete curves in Brazil and Bangladesh.

The story doesn't end with Brutalism's 1990s fall from grace-when stained concrete and broken dreams made these buildings synonymous with urban decay and dystopian sci-fi. Instead, it captures the movement's surprising 21st-century revival, driven by Instagram aesthetics, luxury loft conversions, and a new generation of architects embracing neo-Brutalist honesty. Perfect for design rebels, urban explorers, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that intimidating concrete tower is a masterpiece or an eyesore, this book argues that Brutalism's raw emotional power and uncompromising truthfulness may be exactly what our sanitized digital age needs-even if we're still not sure we like looking at it.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940203488091
Publisher: Ashleigh Robertson
Publication date: 10/06/2025
Series: A Brief History of - Architecture
Edition description: Unabridged
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