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Web Brutalism, seamfulness, and Notion

Brandon Dorn
UX Collective
Published in
10 min readSep 1, 2020
A large, many-storied, abandoned-looking concrete building.
City Planning Department (1961) in Sheffield, Great Britain. Photo by Paolo Margari
Images of Brutalist websites, which include stark typography and colors and goofy layouts.
Some Web Brutalist fun. Left to right: book.land, Studio Push, x20xx, In the City. Below, Bloomberg’s 2016 Design Conference registration site.
A concrete building that looks like it sits on giant hands.
Geisel Library in La Jolla, CA (1968), designed by William Pereira. Photo by Michael Nielsen
Spacious interior of a large concrete bank.
The Bank of London and South America (1966) in Buenos Aires, designed by Clorindo Testa and SEPRA
Concrete building with many overlapping planes.
Kulturzentrum Mattersburg (1976) in Austria, designed by Herwig Udo Graf

It is our intention in this building to have the structure exposed entirely, without interior finishes wherever practicable. The contractor should aim at a high standard of basic construction, as in a small warehouse.

The Chicago skyline juxtaposed with an image from Google’s Material Design library.
The International Style of architecture, popularized by architects Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius, was known for its abundant use of steel, glass, and concrete, yet architects in the 1960s turned away from its “rigid formal monotony” as they looked for more diverse architectural possibilities (The Art Story). Although aesthetically similar to Brutalism, the International Style came to feel homogenous, predictable, and generic. Photo by Eric Allix Rogers
A short, boxy school building set in a large parking lot.
Hunstanton Secondary School (1954) in Norfolk, England, designed by Alison and Peter Smithson. Photo by Anna Armstrong (2011)
A concrete building made of many overlapping cubes.
Habitat 67 in Montreal (1967), designed by Moshe Sadie. Its plan of modular blocks form a kind of architectural proto-Notion.
The UX Collective donates US$1 for each article published in our platform. This story contributed to Bay Area Black Designers: a professional development community for Black people who are digital designers and researchers in the San Francisco Bay Area. By joining together in community, members share inspiration, connection, peer mentorship, professional development, resources, feedback, support, and resilience. Silence against systemic racism is not an option. Build the design community you believe in.

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