(no title)
rgoldfinger | 3 years ago
In short, the designers of these buildings experienced trauma during the wars that changed their brains, in a way that makes human features upsetting. Most buildings reference human features in some way (mouth, eyes), and this modernism avoids that and calms their brains.
It aligns nicely with the astute observation about the windows, in that they humanize these large buildings.
ArchitectAnon|3 years ago
Here’s an example: In the 80’s, in London and elsewhere in the UK, plenty of brutalist towers were demolished and replaced with more traditional brick two story houses, only for the residents to realise that they had taken a big downgrade to smaller darker houses, and were still living in a community with the same social problems as before that people said would be fixed by changing the style of architecture.
Brutalist architecture is a branch of modernism, like jazz and abstract paintings. Most of it is experimental, some of it is shit design and sticking plastic ionic columns on it wouldn’t fix it. I don’t think you can seriously dismiss the whole genre as the product of mental illness.
Schroedingersat|3 years ago
New materials could be used for designs with a mix of scales of features.
jdm2212|3 years ago
mmcnl|3 years ago
psychphysic|3 years ago
Just fads. Same way web site designs follow trends.
You can revert a website with some difficulty, good luck reverting a 5-10 building project!
pyrale|3 years ago
https://www.gettyimages.fr/detail/photo-d%27actualit%C3%A9/j...
Hope that helps you understanding.
geoduck14|3 years ago
hgsgm|3 years ago
slim|3 years ago
eternalban|3 years ago
How could anyone make a statement about "human features upsetting" someone like Le Corbusier. This is entirely ignoring 1/2 of his career. And the OP throwing in the Unite Habitat system with the rest of the specimens was a bit galling.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Cit%C3%A...
https://www.themodernhouse.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/le...
That's actually pretty progressive work for 60s and none of your local area housing projects look remotely like Corbusier's buildings, I assure you. (I did some delivery for a charity in NYC and I've seen the inside of those horrid places.) 2 entirely different mindsets and intellectually sloppy to throw in developer driven copycat crap with the works of architects like Corbusier or Mies.
IshKebab|3 years ago
You'd have to stretch the meaning of "eye" or "mouth" out so thin it becomes "opening"...
epolanski|3 years ago
Also it would've shown in other forms of art whereas the post war artistic trauma lasted to the early 50s in movies and no longer.
stubish|3 years ago
But I also don't buy the theory that it was the war, as I think you see similar brutal design in Nazi and Facist architecture.
noobermin|3 years ago
wlonkly|3 years ago
xkcd1963|3 years ago
makeitdouble|3 years ago
ear7h|3 years ago
"There is only one right angle; but there is an infinityde of other angles. The right angle, therefore, has superior rights over other angles; it is unique and it is constant"
s/right/white/ and s/angle/race/ and you probably have a direct quote from Hitler.
"things which come into close contact with the body, are of a less pure geometry"
You don't have to go around trying to give fake diagnoses to Le Corbusier to find where things went wrong. You just have to listen!