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Sun, Sand, and Endless Coastal CharmColumbus, OH Edition
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2 min read

The Brutalism Renaissance Is Getting Out of Hand and I'm Here for It

Staff Writer
July 9, 2026

I watched someone on TikTok spend forty minutes explaining the "emotional weight" of Brutalist architecture while standing in front of a parking garage, and I need to talk about how we've collectively lost our minds in the best possible way.

Brutalism was supposed to be over. For decades, it was the architectural equivalent of a bad breakup—something your parents' generation built that everyone agreed looked depressing and cold. Concrete slabs. Harsh angles. Buildings that look like they're contemplating their own existence. The style became shorthand for dystopian futures and government oppression. And then, somehow, we decided this was hot.

Now there are museum exhibitions dedicated to it. Interior designers are charging thousands to make your living room look like the inside of a Cold War bunker. Coffee shops are painting their walls the color of unfinished concrete. I saw someone post about the "sensuality" of a raw concrete wall and got forty thousand likes, and listen—I get it, but also, let's be honest about what we're doing here. We're aestheticizing the thing our grandparents tried to escape from.

Here's what I actually love about this: We're finally admitting that beauty isn't always about comfort or prettiness. A massive concrete structure that makes you feel small? That's doing something. It's not trying to seduce you with charm. There's an honesty to Brutalism that feels radical right now, when everything else is designed to make us feel cozy and algorithmically optimized for our pleasure.

The problem is that we're turning it into pure aesthetic, divorced from the actual ideology and failure it represents. We want Brutalism's brooding intimidation without its earnest utopianism or its very real problems—the buildings did age terribly, whole neighborhoods were alienated by imposing public structures, and yes, some of this stuff is genuinely depressing to live around.

But here's the thing: maybe that's okay? Maybe reclaiming something ugly and making it desirable is actually a form of cultural resistance. We're saying that not everything has to be Instagram-friendly, that difficulty and challenge can be beautiful, that a concrete wall doesn't need to apologize for existing.

So yes, I'm buying the brutalist coffee table book. Yes, I'm considering a concrete accent wall. And yes, I'm aware I'm part of the problem. But at least our generation's architectural obsession is something with actual weight to it—literally and spiritually. That's more than I can say for whatever minimalist beige thing comes next.

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