47 points

I swear there were like 3 guys in the 60s or something that loved brutalism so much that they spent the next few years going to major cities to convince mayors to build the ugliest, most ghastly buildings that would remain as eyesores for decades to come.

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42 points

Brutalised architecture absolutely slaps when done right

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16 points
*

Well the right hotel looks pretty decent, although seeing just bare concrete makes me want to indulge in suspicously cheap vodka and intoxicate myself for my entire life + depression.

It has it’s weird charm, like looking back to the awful past of the USSR. These are a great reminder for us eastern europeans to never ever let another communist regime to power.

Maybe I would love the brutalism’s uniqueness but this stigma is coming strong with me unfortunately.

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6 points

Looks like the Barbican in London to me, it’s apartments and a public bar/drinking/working area, nice spot to hang out!

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6 points

For me personally that looks very interesting if that’s the right word, it pikes my curiousity, but it evokes a very uneasy feeling which would make me want to leave rather than hang around this area.

Kind of “nothing is allowed here if it’s not with explicit purpose”

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4 points

Brutalism has absolutely grown on me with age

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2 points

This looks like something out of Mass Effect.

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2 points
*

It’s kinda okay, but some cheap white (or any other color!) paint would absolutely be an improvement in my eyes. I’ve yet to see an example (and at this point I don’t think there is any), where paint over otherwise okay brutalist architecture would improve things. Bare Concrete is just an ugly and unfinished look.

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9 points

I applaud their efforts and results!

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6 points

Beats black box urbanism. (But I might be misremembering the name of the style lol.)

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17 points
*

Where I live there was a period in the 80s where people got obsessed with ‘roughcast’ and decided to start covering their houses with sharp rocks. I’d be scared of falling against them while drunk and tearing my face open.

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7 points

Eh that doesn’t look so bad.

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5 points

That must be a nightmare to keep clean.

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4 points

Pebble dash can fuck off

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3 points

There’s a building in my hometown with this stuff. I have vivid memories of scraping against it on my bike. Over 20 years later my heart still jumps if I pass this dreaded material

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3 points

only so much you can do when everything else has already been done…

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8 points

It’s time for Solarpunk architecture.

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26 points

Can’t be brutalist if there’s no concrete!

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19 points

Is that the cybertruck x 9000?

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18 points

The amount of rust seems on track.

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Elon just claimed it was on X.

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18 points

Needs less metal and more concrete.

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16 points
*

I find some of the origin story fascinating. Apparently it almost started a war with Libya (2nd story).

Only the bottom part of the sandcrawler was built for close-up scenes in the Tatooine desert for Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope. In Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones these large vessels appeared on matte paintings. George Lucas took many pictures of the treads of NASA’s space rocket carrier (known as a crawler) as inspiration for the sandcrawler.

https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Sandcrawler/Legends

In Jay’s book, the author implies that the original shooting location of the Jawa Sandcrawler may have been a little too close to the Libyan border for Gaddafi’s comfort, because the Libyan government “rushed inspectors across the border to ensure Lucas’s crew wasn’t constructing some newfangled military vehicle.”

The vehicle’s original design was conceived by Colin Cantwell, and was later redesigned by Ralph McQuarrie, one of the most famous of the Star Wars designers. It was modeled after NASA moon rovers from the time. There were smaller models, of course, used for effects shots, but the bottom half of outsize Sandcrawler — complete with tank treads — was also built to accommodate a notable scene where Luke Skywalker’s uncle buys R2-D2 from the Jawas.

https://www.slashfilm.com/1257153/star-wars-sand-crawler-mistaken-for-real-military-vehicle-filming-a-new-hope/

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18 points

That’s hilarious. I wonder what Gaddafi thought when the inspectors returned to give their report.

“It’s just Jawas, sir.”

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