The New Brutalism By Reyner Banham -
Crucially, Banham also introduces the concept of the Borrowed from the Smithsons, this aesthetic embraces the everyday, the vernacular, and the imperfect. A brutalist building does not invent a utopian order; it confronts the existing order—the water tower, the exhaust vent, the service stair—and elevates these “found” elements without ironic distance. This is where Banham’s criticism becomes radical: the beautiful is no longer a property of form, but of truthfulness .
The Ethical as the Aesthetic: Reyner Banham’s The New Brutalism and the Making of a Counter-Movement the new brutalism by reyner banham
Banham’s 1955 article, “The New Brutalism,” in the Architectural Review , first codified the movement. He identified three core principles: 1) Formal legibility of structure (the “beauty of the skeleton”), 2) Clear exhibition of materials (no paint over brick), and 3) An architecture of “image” rather than space—a building that reads as a single, memorable gestalt. This was a direct riposte to the picturesque spatial manipulation of figures like Frank Lloyd Wright. Crucially, Banham also introduces the concept of the
When critic Reyner Banham first used the term “New Brutalism” in 1955, it was almost a joke—a label for a cluster of unpolished, aggressive projects by Alison and Peter Smithson, such as the Hunstanton School (1954). By the time he published The New Brutalism in 1966, the term had been applied to everything from Marseille’s Unité d’Habitation to London’s brutalist council estates, often as a pejorative. Banham’s task was therefore forensic: to rescue the term from mere abuse and forge a precise critical framework. This paper explores how Banham shifted architectural criticism from formal description to ethical evaluation, arguing that New Brutalism’s true legacy is its demand that architecture reveal, not conceal, its means of existence. The Ethical as the Aesthetic: Reyner Banham’s The
To understand Banham’s project, one must first grasp the architectural climate of 1950s Britain. The dominant discourse was still the late Modernism of the Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM), which Banham found increasingly sterile—a “white, machine-for-living” aesthetic divorced from lived reality. The Smithsons, as members of Team X, sought to break from CIAM’s functionalist zoning. Their Hunstanton School, with its exposed steel frame, glass bricks, and visible water tanks, horrified traditionalists. Banham saw in it a return to the radical honesty of early Modernism (Gropius, Mies) but stripped of any compositional elegance.
Banham’s analysis of Hunstanton (1954) is the book’s keystone. He describes how the school makes no attempt to hide its functions. The electrical conduits run openly across ceilings. The steel columns are standard rolled sections, not encased. The brick infill is laid in a common bond, not a decorative Flemish bond. For Banham, this is not poverty of design but an “intense, almost neurotic concern with the reality of the building.” The aesthetic emerges directly from the ethical demand: Do not simulate. Do not embellish. Let the building be exactly what it is—a shelter for learning, assembled from industrial components.
Reyner Banham’s The New Brutalism is not merely a historical document; it is a masterclass in critical alchemy. Banham took a pejorative, a handful of buildings, and a loose attitude, and transmuted them into a coherent theoretical position. He showed that architectural criticism can be performative: by naming and analyzing, the critic helps bring the movement into being. Ultimately, Banham’s Brutalism is a permanent provocation—a reminder that architecture’s primary obligation is not to beauty, but to reality. As he wrote in the book’s closing lines: “Brutalism, then, is not a style, but a moral position.” That position, for better or worse, continues to haunt the conscience of modern architecture.