Can we align Brutalism’s boldness and transformative energy to an ecological agenda?
Over the last fifteen years, Brutalism has experienced an extraordinary revival and reassessment: from being near universally reviled to becoming the subject of numerous books and exhibitions, and featuring in everything from art prints to tea towels. Beyond the simple allure of moody, black and white photographs of concrete, the way Brutalist buildings stand as powerful evidence of a fundamentally different political, economic and social settlement to that of today has attracted a lot of interest among those looking for alternatives today.
More recently, a growing number of commentators have pointed out that Brutalist buildings, alongside their social or political associations, also stand as the built embodiments of an era that assumed energy would be cheap and plentiful in perpetuity – heating, cooling and ventilation could be resolved by mechanical means. As a result, Brutalist buildings are some of the most – if the most – carbon intensive buildings ever to be built in terms of both embodied and operational carbon, and in many ways stand almost as a celebration of the age of oil.
This event explores how we might reconcile this paradox, taking the boldness and transformative energy of Brutalism and aligning it to an ecological agenda – and establish what an Eco-Brutalism. Can we reimagine Brutalism’s original qualities and ideals – material honesty, addressing the city as found, it’s imagistic aspects – in ways that are carbon neutral or carbon negative?
Creative adaptive reuse of Brutalist buildings or otherwise is obviously core to this, but the discussion will also encompass new build (where necessary) that makes use of natural materials from timber and stone, to emerging bio-material and techniques. If Brutalism celebrated the formal potentials of reinforced concrete and energy profligacy, is there an equivalent approach for natural materials that narrates their formal and aesthetic potentials and carbon efficiency?
Speakers
Florian Urban – Professor of Architectural History and Head of History of Architectural and Urban Studies at the Glasgow School of Art. Author with Barnabas Calder of Architecture and Fuel – 14 Buildings from Antiquity to the Oil Age (Routledge, 2025).
More speakers to be announced.
Part of ‘This Was The Future’ – a series where expert speakers tackling the big questions and key issues around Tyneside’s 1960s and 1970s transformations.
Image credit: Killingworth Towers, c. 1980. Image Courtesy of Amber Collective