99% Invisible - The Brutalists
Episode Date: February 25, 2025A film about a struggling architect, a style the world loves to hate—The Brutalist and Brutalism itself share more than just a name. Is it bold vision or concrete failure?The Brutalists Subscribe to... SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and get exclusive access to bonus episodes. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
The Brutalist is a movie. I don't know if it's a good movie or a bad movie, but it
is definitely the most movie I've seen this year. It is also a movie nominally about architecture
and is nominated for 10 Academy Awards. So it felt like journalistic
malpractice if we didn't talk about it on the show at least a little bit.
The story follows a fictional Hungarian architect named László Tóth and his struggles to build
a community center in rural Pennsylvania. The film neatly summarizes the debate about
the architectural style known as brutalism in this one exchange.
Concrete is sturdy and cheap.
Concrete is not very attractive.
The job of architect has often been depicted in movies, even though the practice of architecture
is not very cinematic.
It's mostly meetings and such.
But it is a romantic profession that lends itself to high drama and strained metaphors,
which, after seeing the Brutalist, is why I wanted to talk to Mark Lamster. Mark is the architecture
critic of the Dallas Morning News, editor of a book called Architecture and Film, and he teaches
an architecture on screen course at Harvard's Graduate School of Design. So he's basically
the first and only call you make
when you wanna talk about this stuff.
Mark, thank you so much for joining us.
It's super fun to be here.
Thanks for having me.
And you have seen the movie, The Brutalist.
I have heard you talk about it.
Yes, I have definitely seen the movie, The Brutalist.
I have podcasted about it.
I wrote a review of it for our newspaper.
So yes.
So let's talk a little bit just about brutalism in general and
why you think that this is the style that this character is working in.
How does brutalism fit into this?
That's a great question.
I'm not really sure that it does.
When we first meet Laszlo Toth, lead character of The Brutalist,
he is really designing in an international style way. He's just
come over. He's doing this bent tube furniture, kind of very Marcel Breuer inspired. The next
thing we see that he designs is this library, but that's more kind of a modern project. It is the appropriate time, mostly for brutalism.
It's a little early for brutalism.
If you're, you know, architectural historian
looking at moments of history,
it's a little earlier than brutalism might begin.
I mean, I have a contention that what it has to do
with brutalism is that the word brutalist is just great.
Yes, it is a great word.
And unfortunately, it has become sort of the,
I think for much of the public,
it has become like sort of default word
for just all modern architecture,
which is completely inappropriate,
but and it's sort of a cross that we architecture critics
and architects themselves have to bear to explain this fact
that no brutalism is actually this type of architecture
that's really constrained to this relatively short period
of time, but you know, in the mind of the general public,
any building that they don't like is brutalism.
Yeah.
So the director of the Brutalist has mentioned
that Laszlo Toth, the lead character,
is this amalgam of maybe a little Paul Rudolph and Mies
van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer.
I mean, were you thinking about this at the time
you were watching it?
The main thing I kept thinking about as I was watching it
was that this émigré who had, you know, ostensibly been the leading
modernist architect of Hungary, was thrust into abject poverty in America
with no connections. And all I could think about was that Philadelphia at
that time where he moves to had this very significant emigre community of architects.
The most notable modernist firm there was Howe and Lascaz.
They'd built the PSFS tower,
which if you've taken an architectural history
modernism survey, you've seen it,
it was the first modernist skyscraper.
So that was built in the 30s in Philadelphia.
So the idea that Laszlo Toth comes there,
can't find work, is like
this unicorn modernist in a city where that is an apostasy.
I kept just sitting there and sitting there and sitting there
and sitting there because this movie is
like three and a half very long hours.
Just wondering why he wasn't getting a job or going out and hanging out
with all these cool modern architects who, you know,
live down the block.
That's a good point.
Did you think about his buildings
as an architecture critic at all?
Did you like look at them and judge them in a certain way?
Well, I'm not really sure what to say about him
as an architect per se, because we see
very little of his actual built architecture until the very end of the film.
The first thing we see is this library that he's designed, and it's very beautiful as
an object, but the only piece of furniture in the library is this, you know, Corbusier style lounge chair. And
it just struck me as like, so frigid and uncomfortable for a library. And, you know, I live not far
from the actual house that Walter Gropius built for himself here outside of Boston. And it's exactly the opposite kind of space.
It's very comfortable and luxurious.
And the idea that the only kind of modernist library
would be this spare frigid place, I think,
didn't line up for me with history.
It looked nice on screen, right?
But it wasn't the kind of place that you'd
want to actually read a book.
Yeah, I think most of the depictions of architecture and design in the movie are all about, you
know, what looks good to be filmed or photographed and what serves the story.
And they're not really about the veracity of different movements and such like that.
I think if the movie wasn't about architecture itself, there would be a lot easier to forgive
the transgressions, shall
we say. But I mean, you asked about like his actual architecture, really the only time
we really encounter his full architecture is, you know, at the end when we're presented
with this community center that the community actually didn't ask for.
So let's talk about architecture in movies in general.
I mean, you edited a book on architecture in film and thought about this a lot.
What are architects in movies for?
They seem like they have different purpose than your average vocation as depicted on
screen.
Absolutely. Well, first of all, there are very few films that are about actual architects
that center on the practice of making architecture. And it's kind of easy to understand why.
And it's because architecture is kind of boring. It takes a long time to make. It's,
you know, a lot of plumbing details. It's a lot of plumbing details.
It's a lot of going over plans.
No one dies.
There's no spying.
There are no superheroes involved, right?
So it doesn't easily fit into the standard narrative
structures of Hollywood film that require the sort of
incredible existential drama, right?
Architecture is kind of like oxygen, you know?
It's all around us, we can't live without it,
but we also take it super for granted, right?
So when architects do appear in films,
usually they're there as a signpost of sort of bourgeois respectability.
He is both, it's usually a man, not always, but quite often, and he is both an artist
and a respected professional, right? So he is this ideal figure, very attractive. I think of the character Sam Waterston plays in Hannah and Her Sisters, right?
I really came in here because I was bored stiff by the party.
What makes you think we're more interesting?
And he's this very urbane, has a box at the opera, is able to discourse on all of the
arts. The design's deliberately non-contextual, but I wanted, discourse on all of the arts.
The design's deliberately non-contextual,
but I wanted to keep the atmosphere of the street,
you know, in the proportions and in the material
that's unpolished red granite.
He's very successful as a Mercedes.
And, you know, in the film,
we see characters played by Diane Weist and Carrie Fisher
just thawning over them.
It's like, which one of them will get to bed,
this man is the principal action around his character.
Of course I was so tongue-tied all night.
I can't believe I said that about the Guggenheim.
That is like, we often see that.
It's like this architect is this,
a signpost rather than an actual,
you know, than his career actually described, you know,
in any number of films, you will see this from, you know,
Jungle Fever, the Spike Lee film, Sleepless in Seattle,
you know, you could just go through Hollywood
and that's sort of the idealized vision of the architect
as professional and artist
at once very desirable.
I mean, the architect is essentially just this artist that just has his stuff together
enough to pay a mortgage.
And a BMW, right, exactly.
So like an older woman can like go like, okay, I'm not like throwing my life away for this
guy.
Yeah, yeah.
Exactly. Yeah. So funny.
Sort of the ground zero for architects depicted on film is Howard Rourke in The Fountainhead. This is
an awful, awful movie.
Well, it's both a great movie and a terrible movie, right? So 1949, The Fountainhead, based on the novel by Ayn Rand and directed by King Vidor. And the characters in the film are, of course,
generally just mouthpieces for her objectivist ideology, basically libertarianist thinking.
They hate you for the greatness of your achievement.
They hate you for your integrity.
They hate you because they know they can either corrupt you
nor rule you.
And the lead character in the film, played by Gary Cooper,
is this architect named Howard Rourke,
and he's a very dogmatic modernist.
He does not want his vision corrupted.
You know, we see him heroically
at the beginning of the film getting this incredible commission for a
skyscraper and when the conservative bankers who he presents his model to see
his modern building, they want to attack on this sort of classical facade on the
front and he is aghast and refuses this and storms out because no one shall interfere with his genius.
It has shocked people.
It's too different, too original.
Why take chances when you can stay in the middle?
If you want my work,
you must take it as it is or not at all.
We are your clients and it's your job to serve us.
I don't build in order to have clients.
I have clients in order to build.
Of course, the film sort of
culminates with this incredible scene where he has now designed a housing project and once again
its completion has escaped his control and his solution to this is to just go and blow up
the housing project.
housing project. And of course, today this sounds like domestic terrorism, but in the world of the film, it's
this act of completely justified, righteous behavior, and he's in fact gets off at this
trial that's held because no one in the world of Ayn Rand should
interfere with the individual heroic genius.
This idea of this architect who no one should confront his vision, he's a sole male genius,
it basically holds even through today.
I think The Brutalist is very much a product of that same vision.
We also have, you know, the character here, played by Adrian Brody, also sort of refuses to have his work corrupted
in any way to the extent that he will pay for all change orders and overruns on its cause.
He cuts three meters from the top, I added to the bottom.
We can't afford all this.
I'm already over budget this quarter.
You take what you need from my feed, Ashley.
Come on, what's the difference between 40 and 50 feet anyway?
The ceiling's still plenty high.
Good, it's approved.
Several of the scenes in The Brutalist are even borrowed,
you know, directly from the fountainhead,
these scenes in quarries and what have you.
Architecture is really a collaborative art practiced
by many people working together over long periods of time.
So I think in many ways,
this is sort of very dated way
of thinking about the profession.
Are there some examples in history of film
where architecture is presented in a way that feels true to you?
I think the best examples are always going to be documentaries.
Two recent ones that I really enjoyed, one,
Stardust, which is a film about the careers and lives of Denise
Scott Brown and Robert Venturi.
And it's really about their partnership,
working together about ideas.
Another film I really enjoyed is called
We Start With The Things We Find,
documentary about the New York-based firm, Low Tech,
founded by Neapolitan partners,
Adetola and Giuseppe Lignano.
And they, what's amazing,
I think there's this very comparable scene
to The Brutalist and also to The Fountainhead, right?
Where in The Brutalist, we see Laszlo Toth
going to this Italian quarry
to find the most beautiful marbles for his project.
Whereas the film on Lotec starts with the
characters also going to Italy, but in fact they're going to a shipyard to look
at shipping containers and all this other infrastructural work, which is, you
know, the detritus of the world, which, you know, they've decided like we need to
recover this and use this and transform the stuff that we might throw away or think of as purely industrial and transform that into architecture.
It's a really beautiful idea.
It strikes me that another thing that filmmakers use architects for is as a very basic metaphor to directors and filmmakers.
Megalopolis, I think, is a movie about filmmaking
more than it's about city planning
in any sort of meaningful way.
In The Brutalist, it kind of blew my mind
that the end credit song is this song that says,
"'One for me, one for you, one for me, one for you,'
which is a movie trope of like,
you're gonna make one for the masses
or for Hollywood
and one of your personal things.
This is not a line architects say very much to each other
because they're all like for all of us.
You know, like there is no one for me.
So what about this is sort of like architecture
as ham-fisted metaphor to movie making.
Well, I think it's kind of an obvious choice, right?
And I saw exactly the same thing when I was looking
at both of those films.
It strikes me, they're both,
stereotypically, the product of this lone male genius
who has this vision and sees it to be completed
as per meeting his genius ideas.
Whereas really, they're also, it's this wide cast of craftsmen
to create this, an artist working together
over a very long period of time.
Usually one person gets the credit,
but there's innu-, look at the credits to a film,
it's like an endless, you know.
In the end, you have this sort of three-dimensional
object that you sort of encounter in time and space, right, whether it's a film or a building.
So there is like a really interesting analogy there, and I think a lot of filmmakers have seen
that over the years. Peter Greenaway and his film, the bellyibel even architect might be an example for that.
Obviously both the Brutalist and Megalopolis stand for that.
In a way, the fountainhead is very much that for Ayn Rand in a way.
But are there actually any works of fiction that get architecture right where you felt like
they really nailed it? I think the filmmaker who best got it was Jacques Tati, the French filmmaker,
the sort of French chaplain, if you will. And his films Mon Oncle and Playtime, they're really
about a confrontation with traditionalism and modernism and how the modern city shapes who we are and our like very humane
look at modern architecture about
Americanization of the city the modernization of the city and
they look at it critically but also with the sort of
humanity and
acceptance like we need to accept what is happening
and we can make fun of it,
but we're going to live in this world
whether we like it or not.
Before we go, are there any other fictional architects
that you wanna talk about?
Well, we haven't talked about America's
most famous screen architect.
Who would that be?
Well, Mike Brady, of course.
That's right, Mike Brady.
So tell me about Mike Brady and how he practices architecture. Well, I think, you know, I'm guessing
that for many of the listeners out there who are aged age. Mike Brady is their most common architect.
He's not a very good architect.
He lives in this very dated,
kitschy ranch burger with a sunken living room.
Of course, the very dramatic open staircase.
And I find that there aren't
too many episodes of the Brady Bunch where we see
Mike actually engaging in architecture, but there
is one that I find incredibly interesting. It's an episode called Mike's Horror Scope.
And in this episode, Mike is approached by this quasi-Italian fashion impresario named
Bibi Gallini, and she is very fabulous.
I would introduce myself, but everyone knows who Bibi Gallini is.
Even people on the street come up to me and say,
it's Bibi.
And I always say to them, hello, my darling.
She wants Mike to design a factory for her,
and she gives him this complete freedom
to do something creative and inventive.
She wants it to be pink and fluffy.
Make the factory the shape of a powder puff.
Powder puff?
Or maybe tall, like a lipstick.
Lipstick? A factory has to be practical and efficient.
And Mike just can't wrap his mind around it. He keeps designing these like very
straightforward factories for her and she's like, no no and then she says she wants the roof to open up and he's like that's technically impossible and what's funny to me is that instead of embracing this brief that he's given he could do anything and create some really interesting architecture he's just so straightforward and lacks such an idea of invention that he
sort of loses the client. I always find it very sad for Mike. It shows the challenge
of the architect, right? Which is like clients are always difficult. You have to figure out
how to both satisfy your own vision while satisfying demands.
It's such a notable deviation from all the other ones we've discussed,
that given complete freedom, he just is like,
please just make it a box and put stuff in it.
Well, this has been so fun to talk about, Mark.
I really appreciate you coming on the show.
It's been a lot of fun. Thanks.
You can read Mark Lamster's architecture column in the Dallas Morning News.
He also wrote an excellent biography
of architect Philip Johnson.
It's called The Man in the Glass House.
Check it out.
After the break, Brutalism 101 with Avery Truffleman.
And we're back.
If you finished The Brutalist and thought, I don't really understand Brutalism, well,
we have a story for you.
Enjoy.
The best James Bond is either Sean Connery or Daniel Craig. I lean towards Daniel Craig. The new movies are just better.
But the Sean Connery films definitely had the best villains.
There's Blofeld, of course, who's so iconic that he turned the act of cat stroking
into a thing that super villains do.
But Bond's flashiest nemesis has to be Goldfinger.
Do you expect me to talk?
No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die.
Do you expect me to talk?
Yeah, I expect you to talk.
There's this dorky fun fact that the Bond villain, Goldfinger, was actually named after
a real person.
That's Truffleman. Avery Truffleman.
The author of the James Bond books, Ian Fleming, named Goldfinger for a man he found so dastardly,
so terrible, that he immortalized him in pop culture.
The real Goldfinger was an architect, Erno Goldfinger, and he made giant, hulking, austere
concrete buildings.
Goldfinger's buildings were decreed soulless.
Inhabitants claimed to suffer health problems and depression from spending time inside them.
Some of Goldfinger's buildings were vacated because occupants found them so ugly.
And yet many architects praised Goldfinger's buildings.
His Trellick Tower, which was once threatened
with demolition, has been awarded landmark status.
This divide, this hatred from the public,
and love from designers and architects
tends to be the narrative around buildings like Goldfinger's,
which is to say gigantic, imposing buildings
made of concrete.
What some people refer to as brutalist architecture.
And a lot of folks, beyond the creator of James Bond, love to hate them.
We are in Worcester Hall, which to my great dismay and frustration,
is often considered the worst building on campus, or Worcester Hall, more like worst.
I met up with Sarah Briggs-Ramsey in Worcester Hall, a brutalist building at UC Berkeley.
I can't tell you how many times I've been locking up my bike outside and I
overhear undergrads walking with their parents and going, ironically, this is the
architecture school and it's the ugliest building on campus.
Yep. Worcester Hall is the architecture school. it's the ugliest building on campus. Yep, Worcester Hall is the architecture school.
Sarah completed her masters there.
Buildings like this are pretty pervasive across most American and Canadian campuses.
Yeah, there was a big, bulky concrete building on the campus where I went to college.
And I hated when I had to go through it.
It just reminded me of a bunker or a bomb shelter.
These big concrete buildings just like bummed me out.
Absolutely.
I mean, it has these connotations of, you know,
Soviet era construction, sometimes third world construction,
all these negative associations.
This is Professor Adrian Forti,
author of the excellent book, Concrete and Culture.
He's been researching concrete for around 10 years now.
It has a bad name.
Apart from aesthetic criticisms,
concrete buildings present environmental concerns.
A lot of these buildings were built at a time
when energy was cheap,
and they use up an awful lot of energy to heat and cool them.
Concrete buildings were built with the illusion of plenty, that we will always have enough energy
to build and heat and cool these massive inefficient structures.
As harsh as it looks, concrete is an utterly optimistic building material, arguably too optimistic.
Really from the 1920s, it was seen as being a material that would change the world.
It had the potential to build things in a way that hadn't been seen before.
Concrete was this material that seemed boundless, readily available in vast quantities, and
could create massive spaces unlike any other material.
So concrete sprang up everywhere.
It's the second most heavily consumed product in the world.
The only thing we consume more of than concrete is water.
We use concrete for sidewalks, bridges, tunnels and highways.
And of course, for giant buildings.
Whether we're talking about stadia or auditoria.
Or condominia or gymnasia or planetaria.
So historically, government programs all over the world loved concrete.
Particularly in Soviet Russia, but also later in Europe, North America. It was used for welfare welfare state
projects. Concrete presented the most efficient way to house huge numbers of people. And philosophically,
it was seen as humble, capable, and honest. Concrete was just out there in all of its rough glory,
not hiding behind any paint or layers, saying,
here I am.
Love me or hate me.
And as concrete buildings came to signify humility, honesty,
and integrity, they were erected all over the world
as housing projects, courthouses, schools, churches,
hospitals, and city halls.
You'll stand outside, and a tour bus will go by,
and there'll be, ladies and gentlemen,
voted the most ugliest building in the world,
Boston City Hall.
How do you compete with that?
Chris Grimley is up against a lot,
but he's trying to restore Boston City Hall's reputation.
My name is Chris Grimley.
I'm with my fellow heroic people,
Mark Pasnick and Michael Kubo.
Chris, Mark and Michael have embarked on what they call the Heroic Project,
chronicling the concrete structures in and around Boston.
Rather than referring to these concrete buildings as brutalist,
they prefer the term heroic, because like so many superheroes,
these structures have the best, most noble intentions,
but are sorely misunderstood.
Also, just generally, brutalism is a big, broad label that gets used inconsistently in architecture.
People tend to disagree on one precise definition.
The name brutalism also just sounds intense, even though it's not actually related to brutality.
It comes from béton brut, which is a French term for raw concrete.
In any case, to these guys, heroic feels like a better term, especially in Boston, where
concrete architecture swooped in and saved the day.
You have to situate Boston in late 50s, 1960s.
It is America's first city.
Well, it is America's most historic city.
Again, not really, but I get your point.
And yet it finds itself in the doldrums. Boston, like a lot of other American cities, was plagued
by a loss of manufacturing jobs and white flight to the suburbs. And for decades, Boston
had the highest property taxes in the nation and almost no development. There is this recognition
from civic authorities
that something needs to be done,
and something needs to be done quickly.
So Boston sets an agenda to make the city great again,
with big, soaring, capable, thoroughly modern buildings
made, of course, out of concrete.
And though some of these buildings were celebrated,
others were really not.
What we call the third rail of Boston concrete modernism
is City Hall.
When Boston City Hall was built in 1968,
critics were put off by this concrete style.
It was called alienating and cold.
And since it was a government building,
this criticism became impossible to remove from politics.
Boston City Hall became a political pawn.
Mayors and city council members kept trying to win public support with promises to get
rid of the building, like John Tobin did when he ran for city council.
Hi everybody, this is John Tobin.
Thanks for visiting votejontobin.com.
Here we are on City Hall Plaza in front of Boston City Hall.
I'm not an architect, but I know bad architecture when I see it.
This is a bad building, and I know bad architecture when I see it.
This is a bad building, and I think we can do a lot
by knocking this building down.
Former Mayor Thomas Menino actually started a study
to really look into tearing it down.
It turned out as a result of the study
that you would need something like a nuclear grade weapon,
basically, to destroy this building
because it's so heavily overbuilt in concrete.
And so, when they couldn't tear down City Hall, officials chose to ignore it.
People that occupied the building for decades and decades didn't like it,
and so they didn't invest money into the building and effectively wanted to see the building go away.
This is called active neglect, and it happens with a lot of concrete buildings.
They are intentionally unrepaired, unrenovated, and
uncared for.
Which only makes the building more ugly, and then more hated, and then more ignored, and
creates this vicious cycle where the public hate of Boston City Hall feeds itself.
And then the discussion years on really became about what the original architects had done
wrong, as if this were not a failure of maintenance, but a failure of the initial design.
When people built these mammoth concrete structures,
no one really thought about maintenance.
They seemed indestructible.
In the early days of concrete,
people assumed that this was an everlasting material
that wouldn't need any attention at all.
And I mean, that's wrong. We know that it does need to be
looked after. It does deteriorate. It does decay. But it can be hard to tell when concrete is
decaying. If you think of brick and timber, the decay takes place on the surface of them. But
with concrete, the deterioration is internal.
Concrete deteriorates chemically from the inside out. Part of this has to do with the metal
reinforcements that help hold up most concrete buildings. The rebar, well, it can rust and the
rust eats away at the overall structure.
But Adrian Forte says tearing them down is not the answer.
Because as soon as you tear them down,
then you have a problem, first of all,
with what you do with the detritus that's left.
And secondly, you've got to replace them
with something else and use up a whole lot more energy
and create a lot more CO2 in building something
in that place.
They already used up all that energy when they were made.
They're already there.
We can adapt these buildings to make them greener
and make them more appealing places to be
by adding windows, for example.
But basically, Professor Forty thinks
we can all develop the capacity to love these concrete
roots in all their hulking glory.
Yeah, sure, people can learn to love anything.
But, you know, as with any art form,
whether it's opera or painting or literature,
the more you know about it, the more you'll get out of it,
the more you'll appreciate it.
And this is especially true of concrete buildings.
Architecture students appreciate them because they know that concrete actually requires
a hell of a lot of skill and finesse to work with.
To do architecture in concrete is proof that you really are an architect.
It's the test of being an architect. With a concrete building, every little detail needs to be calculated in advance.
Concrete is wildly intimidating to work with. Once you pour it, there's no going back.
With a concrete building, it's like the result of an immaculate conception.
The whole thing is an integral monolithic whole and it has to be right.
And aside from the interesting design challenges it poses,
concrete itself as a material can be subtly beautiful if you look closely.
You know, what we think of as just a monolithic, consistent, homogenous texture is actually really rich
and has a lot of
interest when you actually go up to it and consider it.
Sarah Briggs-Ramsey, the one I spoke with at Berkeley's Worcester Hall, did a year-long
project traveling around the world looking at concrete buildings in Europe,
in Asia, and South and North America.
To create a global comparison of one material that I think is so sort of under considered.
It's like the background of all the cities, but no one actually stands to look.
We call the city a concrete jungle to talk about the artificialness of the urban landscape.
But concrete can actually be a very natural expression of the environment.
Concrete's color and texture can be dictated
by local climate, local earth, and local rock.
This is the Harvard Science Center on the Harvard campus,
and it's got a very purpley,
like a really pronounced purpley color,
and that's the ground from the site.
Concrete can also be an expression
of local style and custom,
like how UK concrete has big thick textured chunks of rock,
while Japanese concrete is very fine and flat.
But the beauty of concrete architecture is all the better
when you can just observe the buildings like pieces of sculpture
without actually having to live and work in them,
which brings in concrete's surprising ally, photography.
Concrete looks good in photographs.
It provides this kind of neutral background.
It provides a wonderful setting for people's skin tones, color of their clothes.
Fashion photographers realized this first and then pockets of the internet started to appreciate
these concrete buildings.
There are lots of these blogs and so on which show a kind of extraordinary enthusiasm for
concrete.
Photography is allowing a new audience of non-architects to appreciate these buildings
for their strong lines, their crisp shadows, and increasingly, the idealism they embody.
They represent a set of ideas about the state of the world and what the future was imagined to be
that, you know, we want to preserve. We should remember what people were thinking 50 years ago.
If we tear these buildings down, we will lose all of that.
Architecture, whether we want to admit it or not, has a sort of shelf life.
A time after which buildings fall out of fashion and then are allowed to fall apart.
Back in the 1960s, Victorian-style buildings were considered hideous, falling apart, impossible
to repair, and we were tearing batches of them down, all the while erecting big concrete buildings.
But enough Victorians were saved that today,
they are these beautiful, lovingly restored treasures.
Brutalist, heroic, whatever you want to call it,
concrete architecture now finds itself at a potential inflection point.
Too outdated to be modern, too young to be classic.
And a small but growing band of architects, architecture enthusiasts, and preservationists
would like us to just wait a bit and see.
Maybe with a little time and love we might discover some architectural diamonds in the
rough that we just can't see right now.
That story was produced by Avery Truffleman back in 2015.
99% Invisible was produced this week by me, Roman Mars, along with Martin Gonzalez, who
also mixed this episode, music by Swan Real, and Martín González.
Cathy Tu is our executive producer, Kurt Kolstad is the digital director, Delaney Hall is our
senior editor.
The rest of the team includes Chris Berube, Jason De Leon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher
Johnson, Vivienne Leigh, Lashma Dawn, Joe Rosenberg, Kelly Prime, Jacob Medina Gleason,
and Me, Roman Marsh, as I
said before.
The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the SiriusXM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north in the
Pandora building, in beautiful Uptown,
Oakland, California.
I think all of us are on Blue Sky now, which is kind of like Twitter, except it's not
supporting an unelected billionaire who's currently dismantling the government.
We're also having a ball on our Discord server where you can join us to make Oscar predictions
and talk about your favorite architect movies.
There's a link to that as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.