Monday 1 September 2014

Own Work: Final Show 'Excavating Utopia' September 2014


Excavating Utopia seeks to re-evaluate the general public's rejection of Brutalist architecture in the UK.


Modernism’s leading concept, tabula rasa (meaning a blank slate) is the concept which led to the historical, social, ecological and economic context being disconnected from a space and thus being free of all negativism and association of what came before, a fresh start for humanity. It was revolutionary and changed the way we designed, built and considered spaces through its rise and fall of Modernism in the 20th century.


Despite the initial enthusiasm for this vision, it later fell fowl of the UK public at large. This could be seen through a combination of factors; physical, such as raw unornamented materials that the tabula rasa concept enveloped; leading to a disconnection of emotional attachment, and social, such as the subsurface fear and disgust of the underclasses within UK culture. However, Modernism’s key failing is convincing the public to accept tabula rasa on a large scale. The resistance to this blank slate ideology lies in the incapability to reassess the function of the capitalist construct of the city, where hierarchy and inequality have always existed.


This project introduces narrative in the form of spatial juxtapositions between manmade surfaces and natural entropies, which seek to recapture the myth of Brutalist architecture, its spirit, shape and forms that were experimented with. A Map (Historical Cartography) was researched and created of the Thames Valley 200BC (a period before large scale change took place in the landscape by the hands of man) overlaid with a current street map of the same area. These pre-existing environments were then juxtaposed with four Brutalist buildings around the Thames Valley area. 


This process embodies the tabula rasa concept in a completely new way without its architectural connotation by referring to pre-architectural environments. This literal meaning to tabula rasa in the mapping and models, we also allow a dialogue between our inherent archaic origins and that of today. Natural environments exist as a direct opposite to architecture, but this nature also provides our primary needs. Using the pre-architectural environments within the juxtaposition it provides a grounding for how we began, adding to the narrative. This engages the viewer in a cognitive dialogue, where they can re-evaluate both society and space, raising the possibility both of making them nostalgic for the modernity of Brutalism and transforming it into a new future architecture.


Alexandra Estate x River Westbourne









 London College of Communication x Southwark Marsh








National Theatre x River Thames








 Trellick Tower x King's Holt