Brutalist architecture is cool again. (Who decides these things I don’t know, but I suspect it’s the kind of people who do the whole urban thing in their twenties before decamping to a leafy suburb or the countryside in their thirties.)
Brutalism’s trendiness won’t be damaged by the fact that Donald Trump doesn’t care for it. His particular bugbear is the J Edgar Hoover Building, the FBI’s HQ – just down the road from the White House.
This is how Jonathan Swan reports the story for Axios:
“In the midst of one rant about the FBI, he lit into the building. ‘Even the building is terrible,’ he observed to an Axios source. ‘It’s one of the brutalist-type buildings, you know, brutalist architecture. Honestly, I think it’s one of the ugliest buildings in the city.’”
Swan goes on to report another source as saying that the President wants to personally oversee a redevelopment at an “excruciating level of detail.”
Commenting on the story for Slate, Henry Grabar associates brutalist buildings with an “idealistic vision of what government can and should take responsibility for”. If, however, you don’t like modernism then, watch out, you could be a fascist:
“The far right appears to be leading a broader backlash against architecture self-evidently built with 20th-century technology. Such structures, in addition to their perceived deviance from the ‘Western traditions’ venerated by American fascists, represent the tastes and lifestyles of America’s treacherous urban elite.”
The relationship between fascism and architecture is far from straightforward. On the one hand, there’s the fascist predilection for monumental pseudo-classical designs (for instance, Hitler’s plan for the redevelopment of Berlin – ‘Welthauptstadt Germania‘); on the other hand, fascists were also promoters and patrons of modernist architecture. For instance, the Casa del Fascio in Como is regarded as a model of 1930s modernism (and bears more than a passing resemblance to some of the buildings I see going up in London today).
And let’s not forget that Le Corbusier, a pioneer of various modernist styles, including brutalism, was also a fascist and an antisemite. Should we separate the man and his work from his politics? Personally, I’m disinclined to – not when his architectural vision so vividly embodies the totalitarian impulse to erase the past and dominate the future.
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