Owen Hatherley: The Brutalist Decades, 17 November 2016
A3: Threads and Connections by Peter Ahrends.
Right Angle, 128 pp., £18, December 2015, 978 0 9532848 9 4Show More Raw Concrete: The Beauty of Brutalism by Barnabas Calder.
Heinemann, 416 pp., £25, April 2016, 978 0 434 02244 1Show More Space, Hope and Brutalism: English Architecture 1945-75 by Elain Harwood.
Yale, 512 pp., £60, September 2015, 978 0 300 20446 9Show More Concrete Concept: Brutalist Buildings around the World by Christopher Beanland.
Frances Lincoln, 192 pp., £18, February 2016, 978 0 7112 3764 3Show More This Brutal World by Peter Chadwick.
Phaidon, 224 pp., £29.95, April 2016, 978 0 7148 7108 0Show More Modern Forms: A Subjective Atlas of 20th-Century Architecture by Nicolas Grospierre.
Prestel, 224 pp., £29.99, February 2016, 978 3 7913 8229 6Show More Modernist Estates: The Buildings and the People Who Live in Them by Stefi Orazi.
Frances Lincoln, 192 pp., £25, September 2015, 978 0 7112 3675 2Show More Architecture an Inspiration by Ivor Smith.
Troubador, 224 pp., £24.95, November 2014, 978 1 78462 069 1Show More Show More“... For us
,’ Steffen Ahrends told his son Peter, who was born in Berlin in 1933, ‘the history of architecture started with the Soviet 1917 revolution.’ It wasn’t entirely a joke. For many designers in the Weimar Republic, and for subsequent generations of modernist hardliners, 1917 had made possible a reconstruction of life on collective, egalitarian and, above all, planned lines ...”