The Brutalism Post Part 3: What is Brutalism? Act 1, Scene 1: The Young Smithsons

What is Brutalism? To put it concisely, Brutalism was a substyle of modernist architecture that originated in Europe during the 1950s and declined by the 1970s, known for its extensive use of reinforced concrete. Because this, of course, is an unsatisfying answer, I am going to instead tell you a story about two young people, sandwiched between two soon-to-be warring generations in architecture, who were simultaneously deeply precocious and unlucky. 

It seems that in 20th century architecture there was always a power couple. American mid-century modernism had Charles and Ray Eames. Postmodernism had Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown. Brutalism had Alison and Peter Smithson, henceforth referred to simply as the Smithsons. 

If you read any of the accounts of the Smithsons’ contemporaries (such as The New Brutalism by critic-historian Reyner Banham) one characteristic of the pair is constantly reiterated: at the time of their rise to fame in British and international architecture circles, the Smithsons were young. In fact, in the early 1950s, both had only recently completed architecture school at Durham University. Alison, who was five years younger, was graduating around the same time as Peter, whose studies were interrupted by the Second World War, during which he served as an engineer in India. 

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Alison and Peter Smithson. Image via Open.edu

At the time of the Smithsons graduation, they were leaving architecture school at a time when the upheaval the war caused in British society could still be deeply felt. Air raids had destroyed hundreds of thousands of units of housing, cultural sites and had traumatized a generation of Britons. Faced with an end to wartime international trade pacts, Britain’s financial situation was dire, and austerity prevailed in the 1940s despite the expansion of the social safety net. It was an uncertain time to be coming up in the arts, pinned at the same time between a war-torn Europe and the prosperous horizon of the 1950s.   

Alison and Peter married in 1949, shortly after graduation, and, like many newly trained architects of the time, went to work for the British government, in the Smithsons’ case, the London City Council. The LCC was, in the wake of the social democratic reforms (such as the National Health Service) and Keynesian economic policies of a strong Labour government, enjoying an expanded range in power. Of particular interest to the Smithsons were the areas of city planning and council housing, two subjects that would become central to their careers.

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Alison and Peter Smithson, elevations for their Soho House (described as “a house for a society that had nothing”, 1953). Image via socks-studio.

The State of British Architecture

 The Smithsons, architecturally, ideologically, and aesthetically, were at the mercy of a rift in modernist architecture, the development of which was significantly disrupted by the war. The war had displaced many of its great masters, including luminaries such as the founders of the Bauhaus: Walter Gropius, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and Marcel Breuer. Britain, which was one of the slowest to adopt modernism, did not benefit as much from this diaspora as the US. 

At the time of the Smithsons entry into the architectural bureaucracy, the country owed more of its architectural underpinnings to the British architects of the nineteenth century (notably the utopian socialist William Morris), precedent studies of the influences of classical architecture (especially Palladio) under the auspices of historians like Nikolaus Pevsner, as well as a preoccupation with both British and Scandinavian vernacular architecture, in a populist bent underpinned by a turn towards social democracy. This style of architecture was known as the New Humanism

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Alton East Houses by the London County Council Department of Architecture (1953-6), an example of New Humanist architecture. Image taken from The New Brutalism by Reyner Banham. 

This was somewhat of a sticky situation, for the young Smithsons who, through their more recent schooling, were, unlike their elders, awed by the buildings and writing of the European modernists. The dramatic ideas for the transformation of cities as laid out by the manifestos of the CIAM (International Congresses for Modern Architecture) organized by Le Corbusier (whose book Towards a New Architecture was hugely influential at the time) and the historian-theorist Sigfried Giedion, offered visions of social transformation that allured many British architects, but especially the impassioned and idealistic Smithsons.

Of particular contribution to the legacy of the development of Brutalism was Le Corbusier, who, by the 1950s was entering the late period of his career which characterized by his use of raw concrete (in his words, béton brut), and sculptural architectural forms. The building du jour for young architects (such as Peter and Alison) was the Unité d’Habitation (1948-54), the sprawling massive housing project in Marseilles, France, that united Le Corbusier’s urban theories of dense, centralized living, his architectural dogma as laid out in Towards a New Architecture, and the embrace of the rawness and coarseness of concrete as a material, accentuated by the impression of the wooden board used to shape it into Corb’s looming, sweeping forms.

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The Unité d’habitation by Le Corbusier. Image via Iantomferry (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Little did the Smithsons know that they, mere post-graduates, would have an immensely disruptive impact on the institutions they at this time so deeply admired. For now, the couple was on the eve of their first big break, their ticket out of the nation’s bureaucracy and into the limelight.

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McMansion Hell: Great Britain Edition (Part 1 of 2)

Hello Friends! Reviewing the houses of Great Britain is a little difficult, because British vernacular architecture itself is, well, a little weird. Between the heavily complex rooflines and busy mixes of materials, the Brits definitely have a heritage of architectural excess. We Americans appropriated the more simplistic stylings of the Brits, with the popularity of more complex Tudor and similar aesthetics emerging the late 19th century/early 20th century. 

I’ve taken the three categories from before, and applied them across four regions in Britain (four more will be covered next Sunday):

The Uggo Award: Pretentious houses gone tacky. These are the epitome of “I’m rich but still cheap.”

The ‘y tho?’ Award: Nonsense houses - these homes are large and bizarre

The Big Mac® Award: The cheapest, saddest, and most unhealthy houses.

So without further ado:

South East

Yeah, most of these came from Surrey. One is from Buckinghamshire, though - for diversity. 

The Uggo Award:

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Somehow this house manages to be snooty and brooding at the same time, just like my ex.

The ‘y tho?’ Award:

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CROIKEY M8 THOSE INKY TENDRILS

The Big Mac® Award:

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This house isn’t ugly in and of itself, it’s just cheaply built. The truth is, the Brits have the classiest McMansions of all the anglophone countries. Though, I still have to get to half of Britain next week, so who knows?

East

Ah yes, home of Cambridge. And all of its ripoffs. 

The Uggo Award:

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aw it’s having a party! 

The ‘y tho?’ Award:

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It’s so gangly and awkward, one can find it almost endearing. I hope that people see me in the same way. 

The Big Mac® Award:

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What is with these houses and the absence of lawns? Like the grass is going to come through your stone lawn and be a huge nuisance. Haven’t y’all seen that documentary about what would happen if humans disappeared? Plants have no mercy!!

Yorkshire & The Humber

OMG but seriously this region is the home of Leeds, Hull, and Sheffield, which have some of the BEST Brutalist buildings ever. So cool. But then also these:

The Uggo Award:

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Ok but how old is this house? it’s just so clunky, parts of it have to be new, right??

The ‘y tho?’ Award:

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I feel like most of the houses in England are just sad. This is like the house equivalent of Eeyore. 

The Big Mac® Award:

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just like: this

Seriously, this isn’t that bad, but then again it’s England. Americans love England because it’s like fancier America, right? 

East Midlands

Ah Nottingham, Leicester, and Derb, the places in England with the most British sounding names according to Americans who watched PBS once when there was nothing else on TV. 

The Uggo Award:

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Like, doesn’t the joke go that England is a dreary place? Why would you make it more dreary by building this monument to stuffy suffering?

The ‘y tho?’ Award:

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Okay, so I think it’s really weird that realtors in Britain don’t have to put the age of the house in the description. I have no idea how old any of these houses are, actually. I’m 100% sure that this is an old house with renovations. The windows with vinyl muntins definitely give that away. Still, they did a bad job. For shame.

The Big Mac® Award:

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How do these travesties even happen? Who looks at this and thinks “wow what a good looking house”? My faith in human pattern recognition is pretty low. 

Anyway, that’s it for this brief part one. I’ll be finishing up England next Sunday (adding a bit of history in too), and the Sunday after that will be Scotland. Meanwhile, 50 States of McMansion Hell continues Wednesday (for real this time) with Delaware! Have a great week! 

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Copyright Disclaimer: All photographs in this post are from real estate aggregate rightmove.co.uk and are used in this post for the purposes of education, satire, and parody, consistent with 17 USC §107. Manipulated photos are considered derivative work and are Copyright © 2017 McMansion Hell. Please email kate@mcmansionhell.com before using these images on another site. (am v chill about this)