Atlas of Brutalist Architecture

$70.00

Brutalism has always been an architecture that demands a position. You either find something profound in the béton brut — the raw concrete, the civic ambition, the refusal of prettiness — or you don't. The Atlas of Brutalist Architecture, published by Phaidon, is the most comprehensive record of the movement ever assembled: 868 buildings across 102 countries, organized into nine continental regions and documented in the black-and-white photography the style seems to call for.

The Atlas of Brutalist Architecture is not organized around the usual suspects. Marcel Breuer, Le Corbusier, Louis Kahn, and Lina Bo Bardi are here, as are the lesser-known structures that prove Brutalism was never a European phenomenon contained to a decade — it was a global architectural logic that arrived everywhere civic ambition and raw materials coincided. Buildings that no longer exist are documented alongside those still standing.

Phaidon has been publishing landmark architecture reference for decades, and this volume is one of the definitive editions in that catalog.

568 pages · 11 3/8 × 8 1/8 in · hardcover · English

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