What's your favourite bit of brutalist architecture?

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Profpointy

Legendary Member
My next cycle tour needs to include Coventry Cathedral, Liverpool Catholic Cathedral and Clifton Cathedral.

Clifton cathedral is near me and I've visited a few times for concerts. Again a rather fine building, particularly the sense
of space from the inside
 

All uphill

Still rolling along
Location
Somerset
Clifton cathedral is near me and I've visited a few times for concerts. Again a rather fine building, particularly the sense
of space from the inside

The inside is, imo, much better than the exterior, maybe why it isn't better known.

336px-Clifton_Cathedral_June_2018_002.jpg
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
I've played a couple of choral concerts in there, and it's quite a challenging acoustic to play in!

Not saying you're wrong, but as an audience member at quite a few gigs there, it sounds excellent, at least for the right music.

Montiverdi Vespers (good trumpet parts!)
Dvorak 8
Korngold violin concerto
Stravinsky Symphony of Psalms

(not all the same gig !)
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
Not saying you're wrong, but as an audience member at quite a few gigs there, it sounds excellent, at least for the right music.

Montiverdi Vespers (good trumpet parts!)
Dvorak 8
Korngold violin concerto
Stravinsky Symphony of Psalms

(not all the same gig !)

Wish I could remember what I've played there!
 

Dogtrousers

Kilometre nibbler
closed to the public since 1989.
Another bit of Brutalist architecture that looks good but fails to function.

I think looking good was a significant part of its function.

This may be wrong but I seem to remember reading/hearing ... In the 60s when M ways were being rolled out there were strict regulations on advertising of service stations. So the wacky tower was built as a kind of billboard.

I just looked on Wiki and the reason it was closed in 1989 is that there's only one way out - no alternative fire exit. Fire regs had changed since it was built (people were tougher in the 60s and thought nothing of jumping 20m out of windows)
 
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