Concrete Dreams – And Other Perspectives on the 1970's Architecture

Please join us on an excursion to Finland in the 1970s! This was a decade when the Finnish nation dreamed of economic growth, prosperity and equality. The suburbs became the new home for many of those who had moved to the city in search of work. They were able to enjoy the increasing amount of free time sat in their modern living rooms, watching television. In architects’ studios, society’s dreams were given a concrete form – and more effectively than ever before.

The exhibition explores the architecture and other phenomena of the controversial decade. It tells about the ideologies and social progress that guided the work of architects at a time when the welfare state was under construction, cities were growing and housing construction was at its peak. A lot of the old houses had to make way for larger houses and more efficient roads. The industrial, systems architecture, which emphasised repetition and uniformity, as well as the grid pattern expanding in different directions, fitted perfectly with the era’s ethos of universality.

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Cite: "Concrete Dreams – And Other Perspectives on the 1970's Architecture" 25 Apr 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1000001/concrete-dreams-and-other-perspectives-on-the-1970-s-architecture> ISSN 0719-8884

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