VISI

Design Deconstruc­tion BRUTALISM

Behind its dramatic concrete façade, Brutalism holds a deep sensitivit­y towards social interactio­n and community engagement.

- WORDS TRACY L YNN CHEMAL Y

Sadly, you can’t see much of Cape Town’s Werdmuller Centre. Barricaded behind corrugated steel, this dilapidate­d 1970s building in Claremont was designed by local architect Roelof Uytenbogaa­rdt, and is a rare South African example of Brutalism’s bold architectu­ral approach. Where it peeks out above the three-metre-high enclosure, you get a hint of the genre’s typical aesthetic: audacious structures of raw concrete set out in monolithic geometric forms of rigid angles and, at times, massive volumetric curves. And it’s this crude, fortress-like appearance that has seen Brutalism labelled as cold and imposing by its detractors.

Its moniker, however, comes from béton brut (raw concrete), the iconic French-Swiss architect Le Corbusier’s material of choice. It was he who laid the foundation for a generation of Brutalist architects that emerge from the 1950s to the ’70s. The more celebrated names among them include Alison and Peter Smithson (England), Paul Rudolph (USA), Clorindo Testa (Italy/Argentina), Kenzō Tange (Japan) and Lina Bo Bardi (Brazil).

A furtive look through the Werdmuller’s steel blockade affords a more valuable insight into the principles on which Brutalism was founded. The old shopping centre has elevated public ramps, souk-like retail hubs, exposure to natural light, and a connecting thoroughfa­re between the train station on one end and the suburb on the other.

It was Le Corbusier’s Unité d’Habitation social housing scheme in Marseille and the Smithsons’ Garden Building for St Hilda’s College in Oxford that further solidified this original sensitivit­y for context and social engagement.

IT ECHOED THE UTOPIAN IDEOLOGY FOR LIVING AND WORKING

IN WAYS THAT WERE OPEN AND GENEROUS.

Their collective aim was inclusivit­y, and connecting the micro-societies that exist in diverse community structures.

In a post-WWII era, Brutalism’s ideals lay in rebuilding ruined cities with a modernist approach that allowed for high-density spaces to be constructe­d quickly, using new technologi­es and keeping costs low. By exposing materials to highlight their elemental roughness, the architectu­ral transparen­cy and honesty echoed the utopian ideology for living and working in ways that were open and generous.

Another of Uytenbogaa­rdt’s masterpiec­es, the UCT Sports Centre, demonstrat­es this employment of vast volumes, where one open hall leads to the next via extensive walkways. But of local structures, it’s the

Rodney Grosskopff-designed Ponte Tower in Hillbrow that probably best encompasse­s everything Brutalism stands for. A radical, cylindrica­l, grey-concrete sculpture marking the Johannesbu­rg skyline – either adored or abhorred – this 54-storey edifice thrives as an apartment block for all, with restaurant­s, a barber shop, a convenienc­e store and a children’s community centre on the ground floor accessed by those passing by the building on foot, linking it to the vibrant street culture of the area.

It would be unfair to call Brutalism brutal. The ideology that underpins it – and the way those ideals are employed in buildings like Bo Bardi’s Sesc Pompeia in São Paulo (a community and recreation centre, library, theatre, exhibition space and more) and Tange’s Hiroshima

Peace Centre – warrants a much gentler interpreta­tion.

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 ??  ?? 1. Geisel Library at the University of California San Diego, designed by William Pereira. 2. The National Theatre in London, designed by Sir Denys Lasdun. 3. French-Swiss architect Le Corbusier. 4. Art space interior at Sesc Pompeia in São Paulo, designed by Lina Bo Bardi. 5. St Mary’s Cathedral in Tokyo,
designed by Kenzō Tange.
1. Geisel Library at the University of California San Diego, designed by William Pereira. 2. The National Theatre in London, designed by Sir Denys Lasdun. 3. French-Swiss architect Le Corbusier. 4. Art space interior at Sesc Pompeia in São Paulo, designed by Lina Bo Bardi. 5. St Mary’s Cathedral in Tokyo, designed by Kenzō Tange.
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