View allAll Photos Tagged brutal_architecture,
Konica C35 EFP, Ilford Delta 400.
Developed and scanned by Borealis Lab.
Centre Du Plateau. Montréal, Québec. Feb 2021.
Nelson House is set to be revamped later this year, losing the characteristic brutalist style in the process.
The road entrance to Brighton Marina. Sussex. England.
Even Brutalism seems tame in describing this. Hardly the most appealing road to enter the development - and a complicated road system to negotiate.
Built in the early 1970s
This shot taken from Qeen Street is of the rear of the Piazza Shopping Centre, I believe this will be demolished as part of the Cultural Heart of The Huddersfield Blueprint.
More information here: www.kirklees.gov.uk/beta/huddersfield-blueprint/pdf/hudde...
Here also is a short video from Kirklees Council showing a fly through The Cultural Heart: www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANGWW2qj-9E
Free and open licenced Lego instructions are now available to build your own University of Edinburgh Main Library. We’ve raised almost £600 for Sight Scotland, please donate if you can.
Copyright © Stewart Lamb Cromar 2021 CC BY-SA
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
L'Enfant Plaza Metro Station during the evening rush hour on the Green/Yellow platform
www.popville.com/2015/08/this-weekends-metro-track-work-66/
greatergreaterwashington.org/post/27723/breakfast-links-w...
Two more photographs of the streets of Chesterfield. Chatsworth Road contains a lot of shops and cafes but at the West Bars end are two shops that occupy modern almost 'brutal' architecture The Salvation Army is in the old LIDL supermarket and Matalan took over the B&Q shop.
Having participated in the Photo24 Challenge recently, myself & Tim Scott decided another trip into London would be a great idea. This time I only took my little Sony RX100 mk3 & iPhone with me as the thought of carrying my Canon 5d mk4 & associated lenses in 30 degree heat for the day was just too much. Ultimately, this was the right decision & whilst at times the image quality & ability to get certain shots that the Canon would have given me proved frustrating the small bag & weight far outweighed this. We arrived in London at 10.15am & headed straight to The Barbican for some brutal architecture shots, then made our way across London taking in various sites along the way, ending up in Brick Lane for a curry at 7.30pm.
Just opposite the quaint Georgian Macquarie House in Launceston, Tasmania, is this example of early 1980s "Brutalist" architecture.
www.examiner.com.au/story/5091850/launceston-is-lucky-to-...
Two more photographs of the streets of Chesterfield. Chatsworth Road contains a lot of shops and cafes but at the West Bars end are two shops that occupy modern almost 'brutal' architecture The Salvation Army is in the old LIDL supermarket and Matalan took over the B&Q shop.
Brutalist side elevation, now heading for demolition. {Edit: I returned to this spot some months later flic.kr/p/RLq5jf }
Pentax K-1 + SMC Pentax F 70-210 f4-5.6
The brutalist monument in the city of Krushevo called "Makedonium". Detail pictured in the light of a summer late afternoon. Black and white elaborated in camera.
I've always loathed this brutalist 60s concrete high-rise, huge office building, although in black and white at night with the regular lines of windows it looks slightly better. But even back in the 60s and early 70s, the time that saw town planners ruin so many of our historic areas, what bloody idiot decided this monstrosity should be built within sight of Edinburgh Castle??
Camera: Olympus XA1
Film: Ilford FP4 Plus
Lab: Harman Lab, Cheshire
Scanner: Epson Perfection V550
Software: Adobe Photoshop & Lightroom