Additional information
| Weight | 1410 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 35.0 × 6.0 × 26.0 cm |
Constructivist Moscow Map1 × £4.50
City Parks, A stroll around the world's most beautiful public spaces Christopher Beanland1 × £16.00
Audio Erotica Hi-Fi brochures 1950s-1980s1 × £21.95
Chernobyl: A Stalkers' Guide1 × £19.50
London Tube Stations 1924-1961, Philip Butler and Joshua Abbott1 × £18.50
Modern Venice Map | Mappa di Venezia Moderna1 × £4.50
Brutalist Britain: Buildings of the 1960s and 1970s by Elain Harwood1 × £18.25
Hackney Advent Calendar1 × £8.00
BRUTALIST CALENDAR 2024 SALE £3.00 LAST FEW1 × £3.00
Hackney Archive Work and Life 1971-1985 Neil Martinson1 × £12.95
Kaweco Pen Tin1 × £2.00
Post War Modern New Art in Britain 1945-19651 × £32.00
Print Club London x Luckies Let's Go Get Lost New York Jigsaw Puzzle1 × £12.00
Berlin U-Bahn Architecture & Design Map1 × £9.50
Isokon and the Bauhaus in Britain1 × £17.00
Plattenbau Berlin: A Photographic Survey of Postwar Residential Architecture1 × £18.00
Occupy Wall Street 2011–2012 Janette Beckman - Cafe Royal Books1 × £4.00
A-Z of Record Shop Bags:1940s to 1990s Jonny Trunk1 × £19.50
Soviet Signs and Street Relics1 × £17.00
Parfett Street Evictions 1973 David Hoffman Cafe Royal Books1 × £4.00
London Advent Calendar1 × £8.00
Sunny Beach February 2005 Daniel Ladnar Cafe Royal Books1 × £4.00
The Story of The Face, The Magazine That Changed Culture by Paul Gorman1 × £25.00
Soviet Bus Stops: Christopher Herwig1 × £17.95
Brutalist London Map by Blue Crow Media1 × £9.00
Martin Parr Tbilisi1 × £26.50
Launderama, Hoxton Mini Press1 × £10.95
Unbuilt, Radical Visions of a future that never arrived by Christopher Beanland1 × £17.25
Auto Erotica: A grand tour through classic car brochures of the 1960s to 1980s by Jonny Trunk1 × £20.00£25.00 Original price was: £25.00.£18.25Current price is: £18.25.
Introducing Britain’s finest examples of brutalist architecture.
Brutalist architecture, Batsford explains, ‘is more popular now than it has ever been. Imposing and dramatic, with monolithic concrete exteriors, it forms an enduring part of our post-war urban landscape. This beautifully photographed book is an authoritative survey of the finest British examples from the very late 1950s to the 1970s, from the late leading architectural writer Elain Harwood, following on from her acclaimed books on Art Deco and Mid-Century Architecture.
It features iconic public buildings like London’s National Theatre, imposing housing such as the Trellick Tower in West London and Park Hill in Sheffield, great educational institutions including the University of Sussex, and places of worship such as Liverpool’s glorious Metropolitan Cathedral, along with some lesser-known buildings such as Arlington House on Margate’s sea front.
Headed up with an introduction that places British brutalism within the context of global events and contemporary world architecture, the huge range of buildings is arranged into Private Houses and Flats, Public Housing, Educational Buildings, Public Buildings, Shops, Markets and Town Centres, Culture and Sport, Places of Worship, Offices and Industry and Transport, and there is a chapter on the atmospheric brutalist sculptures and murals that dot our cities’.
If you’re part of the increasingly large ranks of brutalism fans, or interested in late 20th-century architecture and society in general, Brutalist Britain is the book for you.
| Weight | 1410 g |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 35.0 × 6.0 × 26.0 cm |