Son unos de los más reconocidos brutalistas ya que sus edificios tienen una apariencia áspera y utilizan el material en bruto dejando atrás materiales simulados como los plastificados y con muchos tratamientos industriales que tanto se utilizaban en su época . Lo que buscan era utilizar los pocos elementos que tenían a su alcance y reutilizarlos generando nuevas ideas de crear, construir y de pensar.
Muchas de sus obras son escuelas, lugares de trabajo y hogares que son básicos para el desarrollo de la sociedad.
Torre trellick
Designed as social housing for the local council, it features numerous unconventional design elements. Architect Erno Goldfinger, drew inspiration from the modernist principles of Le Corbusier's …show more content…
It is loosely based on Goldfinger’s earlier and smaller Balfron Tower of similar style and construction. Its completion in 1972 marked the end of an era of high-rise tower blocks, which were losing popularity due to the inherently negative social problems that plagued them. Incorporated into the design are two volumes of different but interconnected function.
The main volume features the dwelling units, while a thin service tower connected at every third floor to the main tower houses the stairs, lifts, and mechanical plant.
One of the most unique features besides the distinct separation of service from dwelling is the method for which the flats are accessed. Nine different types of two level flats are designed with the main entry lying on every third floor that connects to the service tower. Once inside the flat, an internal stairway directs occupants up or down into the next volume of the flat. By limiting the internal public corridors, the flat spaces above and below are able to feature spaces that stretch across the floor plate, exposing windows on both …show more content…
The Balfron Tower by architect Erno Goldfinger is an iconic Brutalist residential high rise located in London’s eastside Poplar borough.
Designed in 1963 for the London County Council and completed in 1967 by the Greater London Council, this social housing estate broke the traditions of typical residential architecture. Conceived as a solution to sprawling suburbia, Goldfinger embraced verticality as the cure.
Rising to 84 meters in height, the Balfron Tower dwarfs its immediate neighbors – the Carradale House, and the Glenkerry House – all forming part of the Brownfield Estates also designed by Goldfinger. In a drastic shift from the typical preconception of tower architecture, Goldfinger separated the services from the accommodation by splitting the tower in two. Entry is gained via a concrete bridge that opens into the main lobby of the slender service tower.
The internal core houses the lifts and staircases, in addition to the utility functions such as laundry, and waste disposal chutes. A pattern of thin windows breaks up the monolithic concrete exterior and provides ample daylighting into the interior. A boiler room located at the top of the service tower cantilevers out slightly from the main façade. This served to reduce the need for pumps as water could flow down to the flats by