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Curtin University Architecture and Planning
15 February 2007 | Category: Life Log
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That’s me in black, well… Curtin University is indeed impressive. Architecturally wise the overall concept is beautiful. Kind of like it, I mean the Brutalist architecture, the exposure of raw concrete, the celebration of concrete. I am a big fan of Tadao Ando, I guess concrete runs in my blood, face bricks, steels, glass, and timber too.
Brutalist buildings usually are formed with striking repetitive angular geometries, and often revealing the textures of the wooden forms used to shape the material, which is normally rough, unadorned poured concrete. Not all Brutalist buildings are formed from concrete. Instead, a building may achieve its Brutalist quality through a rough, blocky appearance, and the expression of its structural materials, forms, and services on its exterior. – Wikipedia on Brutalist

And so I paid a visit to the Architecture and Planning building, it is kind of spooky in there – Brutalist. I guess in western country Brutalist is an acceptable architecture style but back home in Malaysia, a building that looks like Brutalist simply means – minimalist, or better known as “cost saving” or in a polite way would translate as “minimalist” or “cheap-skate”

Some sculpture by Howard Taylor at the entrance of Architecture and Planning, its called “Cyclops”. The idea is about sea shell form and flowing ocean, its about the ability to survive and operate in an ever changing environment… blah blah…
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Mctindle
on April 9th, 2008Believe me, Brutalism isn’t exactly acceptable in the US either. Most of the buildings have awful issues with ventilation, structure, and design. They are god-awful ugly, and were popular for a short time period. They are now being demolished all over the place.
Yonatan
on September 17th, 2008Tadao’s concrete has a nice “finish” to it. Better then those stripes you see everywhere else.
The cheap brutalism still gives me nightmares since my elementary school and junior high were claustrophobic mazes of gray corridors and stairwells.