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Ah, lovely, beautiful sexy concrete. One of Mankind's greatest inventions, it could be argued. Composite building materials have been in use since the time of the Egyptians, and the Romans first introduced it to Britain.
So, let's see yer concrete carbuncles. From the small to the tall, the simple to the most elaborate.
Once again, where else can I start??
Colechurch House, London Bridge:
[img] http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/propertySearch/get.res?guid=124baa6c-9f24-463b-8dd8-297f2895d447 [/img]
Space House, Holborn:
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National Theatre, South Bank:
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The multi storey car park in Gateshead that is no more...
๐ฅ
HTS, is that the Stratosphere?
Dortmund TV Tower (it's quite windy up there)
Brunel Uni Lecture Theatre (I believe it's a listed building because of the wood-grain in the concrete):
EDIT - Oh Poo.....they've taken the link down or something.......
Found another one....
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I tried to find some more pictures of the 'interesting' Brunel campus buildings but couldn't. I believe people find them too disturbing.
EDIT - Oh and some more Brunel-based Trivia. I believe the lecture theatre & Howell Building behind it are meant to look like a Spanish Galleon, when viewed in isolation. But, the buildings around it have encroached so much that you can't stand far enough back to take it their full beauty.
The sunken garden at the front of the lecture theatre was supposed to be a pond, further strengthening the Spanish Galleon (in water) thing. But, myth says that when it was filled it leaked and so they just left it empty.
Canary Wharf underground station
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50p Building in Croydon
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Better at night
[img] http://www.croydonguardian.co.uk/resources/images/257074/?type=display [/img]
Tricorn Center, Portsmouth
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Didn't look quite as good in daylight...
Fiddlers Ferry Power Station in Warrington. My grandparents lived not far away from it so I've driven past it countless times. Horrible place but cooling towers have, for some strange reason always impressed me.
Oh look at all this lovely concrete! ๐
(Weeps at the beauty of it all)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that all of the Roman buildings above are stone, held together with mortar
Apparently the Pantheon in Rome has the World's largest unsupported concrete dome.
Nice to see the Italians continuing with the tradition of flamboyant stadia:
San Siro, Milan.
Love the cooling towers - the shape is driven purely by function but is so "right"
Stumpy... I thought that the Brunel library was supposed to be a representative of the SS Great Britain? I also heard when I was there that it was built the wrong way round, but that could be legend.
[img] http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/content/news/migrated-news/images/birmingham-central-library [/img]
and
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Lovely Brummy buildings
Stoney Trail - Bow River Bridge Calgary
can't find a decent picture of this bridge but it is very beautiful in the fleash so to speak
Tricorn Center, Portsmouth
I have completely forgotten what that looked liked
I was going to say, the mancunian way ... i used to walk past that sign everyday and wonder about it.
Terrible material. Shocking levels of embodied energy in the manufacture of concrete. A real shame that more people don't give a toss about what their houses are made of - but they will slap a few solar panels on the top of it to make them feel a bit better.
TSY - Prado skatepark? Best bit of French architecture on the thread so far.
I'll bite TooTall. Very few private houses in this country are made from concrete. Also, modern concrete framed buildings are have to pass stringent Building Regs for energy efficiency that are getting tighter all the time.
Are bricks not reasonably energy intensive also?
The [url= http://www.thecoolhunter.co.uk/architecture ]Coolhunter[/url] has endless fatastic buildings, a lot of them concrete.






































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