Korean Curiosity: Is Seoul Experiencing a "Neo-Brutalist Revival"?

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© Raphael Olivier

During his frequent travels to Seoul, Hong Kong- and Singapore-based photographer Raphael Olivier noticed a new trend taking the South Korean capital: a crop of geometric, concrete buildings of all genres. He calls the new style Neo-Brutalism, after the modernist movement that proliferated in the late 1950s to 1970s, in which raw concrete was meant to express a truth and honesty. Olivier's observation led him to capture the phenomenon in a personal photo series—a photographic treasure trove of these projects which, when taken as a whole, uncovers a cross-section of this trend in the city's architecture.

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Cite: Isabella Baranyk. "Korean Curiosity: Is Seoul Experiencing a "Neo-Brutalist Revival"?" 25 Apr 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/869385/korean-curiosity-is-seoul-experiencing-a-neo-brutalist-revival> ISSN 0719-8884

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© Raphael Olivier

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