Brutalist architecture, known for its raw concrete, geometric forms and imposing presence, has gained a renewed interest in the modern age of social media and more recently through the film The ...
The term is simply taken from béton brut, French for “raw concrete.” It's not about the adjective, man, but the noun. The brutalist movement was popular from the 1950s to the mid-'70s and ...
The exposed, poured-in-place “raw” concrete—béton brut—of which they were wholly or partially constructed accounts for “brutalism,” the name by which the architectural craze these buildings launched ...
Adrien Brody's Oscar-winning movie embodies an architectural movement that embraces the raw and the unadorned. And at the ...
raw concrete, called "béton brut" in French. Their form and appearance are uncompromising, with no decorative adornments and ...
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