The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Death knells sound for building style

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. >> When an exposed concrete subway vault near the U.S. Capitol was painted white this spring, riders rejoiced at the brightened Washington Metro station. But some preservati­onists were unhappy, complainin­g that a “cardinal rule” of the Brutalist style was broken.

Brutalism, which got its name from a French word for raw concrete, has been sparking public battles ever since the architectu­ral style flourished in the 1960s and 1970s, spawning buildings from Boston to Belgrade.

Now, the era’s aging structures are being declared eyesores and slated for demolition in cities around the world. Or, as in Washington’s Union Station, their austere features have been softened.

DEATH TOLL

The public’s eagerness to get rid of Brutalist buildings has made their life expectancy short, compared with some older architectu­ral styles. Structures headed for imminent demolition include an office building in York, England. A church in Atlanta was razed this spring, and the McKeldin Fountain near Baltimore’s Inner Harbor disappeare­d this year. Structural problems can also hasten their death. Earthquake concerns in the San Francisco Bay Area doomed architect Mario Ciampi’s landmark Berkeley Art Museum, which remains vacant and has been replaced with a new museum nearby.

KAZOO FUNERAL

For all the Brutalist buildings that go down without a fight, a few get a loving farewell. In downtown Providence, kazooplayi­ng mourners recently held a funeral procession and gave eulogies as demolition crews prepared to tear down the John E. Fogarty Building, built as a government welfare office in the 1960s.

“It’s not an easy style to like,” said Marisa Angell Brown, an architectu­ral historian at nearby Brown University who attended the funeral and cowrote a mock obituary for the 49-year-old building. “We tend to prefer boring to ugly.”

Final work to raze the building began Friday.

She said the “preservati­on community here didn’t put up a huge fight to save it,” but she will miss the building, especially if it’s replaced by a bland hotel. The owner of an Irish pub across the street disagrees.

Murphy’s bar proprietor Ruth Ferrazzano said its grim look would be more fitting in Soviet Russia.

ELEGANT AND SEXY

Not everyone thinks the Brutalist style is ugly. In Sydney, Australia, tenants of a public housing highrise overlookin­g the harbor and the city’s opera house have been fighting to protect the terraced building by getting it listed on a historical registry. A chainlink fence was erected this week as both sides await a court ruling that could decide what happens next.

“True Brutalism is at once elegant and sexy,” wrote a columnist defending the building in The Sydney Morning Herald last year. “It’s a style that esteems strength and raw honesty, but especially as juxtaposed against the delicacy of glass, the sway and spike of nature, the play of light.”

PROGRESSIV­E IDEALS

It’s not an accident that Brutalist buildings are often public, from DC’s forbidding FBI headquarte­rs, which is likely fated for demolition, to housing complexes in Europe and college campuses, city halls and county administra­tion offices throughout the United States.

 ?? MATT O’BRIEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo shows the John E. Fogarty Building, a former government building in the Brutalist architectu­ral style, in the middle stages of demolition in Providence, R.I.
MATT O’BRIEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo shows the John E. Fogarty Building, a former government building in the Brutalist architectu­ral style, in the middle stages of demolition in Providence, R.I.

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