petercooper a day ago

It's one of my favorite places to spend time when in London. It's comfortable, clean, quiet, aesthetically striking, easy to loaf around at, and there's high brow art in numerous forms to enjoy – it's kinda like BBC Radio 3 if it were a neighborhood. It's also five minutes from the Elizabeth Line and the parking is good which is unusual for the City. It's strikingly non-commercial - there are no chains or even convenience stores there, though there is a fantastic music shop. It's one of those rare places you can feel more intelligent and cultured by merely being there.

I'd love to retire there when the kids are gone, although there are a lot of oddities about Barbican living to contend with that are probably more fun to read about than deal with for real.

  • freyfogle a day ago

    I lived there for three years, rented a flat. Living in the Barbican was fantastic, livign in my flat was not fantastic. I used to joke it was a time machine to 1965. There was not only no dishwasher, there was literally no space for a dishwasher. Day one that seems funny, a few days later less so. I was spending a fortune in rent to spend 30 minutes every day handwashing my dishes. I did know people who had bought and renovated, they had amazing places. Oddly on my hall of 10 there were 10 flats of which 4 were empty. I don't mean someone just came occasionally I mean 100% empty with no furniture, with rich people just using it as an investment. Overall though was a greart experience, it's a fantasic place.

    • darrenf 12 hours ago

      I spent the first 46 years of my life living in properties in London with no dishwasher. Honestly never thought they were particularly common. In fact the one in my current house was recently out of action for 6 weeks and I tried to convince my partner we should take the opportunity to get rid of it and fill the space with something more useful!

    • codeulike 10 hours ago

      Lived in London for 20 years, rented 7 or 8 different flats in that time, none of them had a dishwasher and most of them didn't have space for one. Didn't know what I was missing. Moving out of London and finally using a dishwasher was a lifechanging experience.

    • rowanajmarshall 14 hours ago

      > There was not only no dishwasher, there was literally no space for a dishwasher.

      This is just London, out of the 8 years I've spent here, 3 of them were spent with a dishwasher. Tbh I've got a dishwasher now and barely use it.

      • distances 9 hours ago

        > This is just London, out of the 8 years I've spent here, 3 of them were spent with a dishwasher. Tbh I've got a dishwasher now and barely use it.

        Do you wash by hand then? I'm curious why someone would opt to not use a dishwasher if they have one. In my ranking it's the third most essential appliance, after a washing machine and a fridge. I probably would rather give up warm water than my dishwasher.

        • nativeit 4 hours ago

          In my house it’s just my father and I, and we don’t really generate enough dishes to justify using an automatic dishwasher. It only takes 5-10 minutes to clean up after most meals, and it would take a few days to get it full enough to run a cycle, after which putting the dishes away seems more burdensome.

          When we visit family (or have visitors at home), the utility of a dishwasher becomes much more apparent when serving 4-6 people.

        • TechDebtDevin 8 hours ago

          Seems wasteful to me... I've never used them. But to each their own.

          • distances 8 hours ago

            Dishwashers save greatly both energy and water when compared to hand washing!

            • Analemma_ 8 hours ago

              On a per-dish basis, yes. But dishwashers are a classic Jevons paradox: once you factor in that the convenience of having one increases your dish usage versus the counterfactual of having to hand wash everything you use, the comparison is less straightforward.

              • DamonHD 6 hours ago

                My family does not, so far as I can tell, use a different number of dishes because of the presence of a dishwasher. The kids almost never wash(ed) up, so it makes/made no difference to them for example. And I loathe washing up, but I always use as few dishes etc as I reasonably can simply from a sustainability point of view. And I ensure that the dishwasher is as full as reasonably possible before being run, and run at the best time from a carbon/cost point of view.

                • Sammi 3 hours ago

                  If you're a single person living in a flat in a city, then you can get in the habit of rinsing your tableware right after using when stuff still easily comes off, and therefore not use much effort at all on washing, and you just reuse the same tableware over and over. This is common and the reason why dishwashers aren't much needed for some.

    • talldan 17 hours ago

      > There was not only no dishwasher, there was literally no space for a dishwasher.

      This is quite common for older places in the UK. Some places might have been updated to allow for a dishwasher, but there are probably rules against that in the Barbican.

      • freyfogle 14 hours ago

        To my knowledge there are no rules against it, it is just a major and expensive plumbing project requiring redoing the whole kitchen. And so as a landlord why bother, you will always find someone willing to rent, no matter how unlivable the place. This dynamic was hardly unique to the Barbican, it was the reality of being a tenant in London, and ultimately one of the reasons I left. London's housing stock is just terrible compared to every other city I've lived in.

        • djtango 12 hours ago

          In my last apartment, I installed a tabletop dishwasher on the balcony and had it share the water inlet with the washing machine using a y splitter.

          It would probably be an eyesore and a huge space killer to use indoor on the kitchentop but thought I'd share a non-invasive solution I used.

          The size of the dishwasher was decent, and with some tiny concessions around placement it was perfectly fine for daily washing although I generally prefer to wash pots and pans by hand regardless of dishwasher space fwiw

        • pledg 13 hours ago

          I’ve lived in 4 different flats in the Barbican and they all had a dishwasher. I think only the studios you’d have a problem finding space for one. Of course in the others it is a preference whether you want to lose space for other things or not. It is not a lot of extra plumbing. It is usually when they want to preserve the original kitchen (or a cheap landlord as you suggest - although all the ones I had there were great)

        • pbhjpbhj 10 hours ago

          You can get a dishwasher that sits on the counter, filled from a tap connector. Space might be tight though.

          • freyfogle an hour ago

            you can do a lot of things. You can live as a hunter/gatherer. The question is do you want to live like that?

    • pbalau a day ago

      > I was spending a fortune in rent to spend 30 minutes every day handwashing my dishes.

      Did you used to cook for the seven dwarves and their extended families, every day?

      • freyfogle 15 hours ago

        not seven, but yes, I had two small children at the time

    • MisterTea 9 hours ago

      > There was not only no dishwasher, there was literally no space for a dishwasher.

      30 minutes? Either you're cleaning up a sink full of dishes you neglected for a week or cleaning up after cooking a dinner for four or more. If you immediately clean your dishes after use its takes almost no time at all, maybe a minute or two.

      • freyfogle an hour ago

        Thanks, amigo. If you want to come by and show me how it's done, you are more than welcome. As it happens, yes, we were a family fo four.

    • bryanrasmussen 12 hours ago

      buy a cheap used dishwasher and move it into one of the unused flats.

    • Lio 7 hours ago

          Withnail: Have you got soup? Why don't I get any soup?
          Marwood: Coffee.
          Withnail: Why don't you use a cup like any other human being?
          Marwood: Why don't you wash up occasionally like any other human being?
          Withnail: (Appalled) How dare you! How dare you! How dare you call me inhumane?!
      
      I haven't lived without a dishwasher since I was a student. I am not keen on repeating the experience.
  • simonw a day ago

    "kinda like BBC Radio 3 if it were a neighborhood"

    Thanks for that, put a smile on my face.

  • philipwhiuk a day ago

    > It's also five minutes from the Elizabeth Line

    And about 200ft. Such is the maze-like nature of the Barbican.

    • zeristor a day ago

      Actually the Barbican station has a lift that goes to the Elizabeth line at the far end.

      • pledg 21 hours ago

        It also depends where you are in the Barbican. It spans between the Barbican station and Moorgate. If you are at the latter you can enter Elizabeth line from there too.

  • tshanmu 15 hours ago

    nice analogy comparing it to BBC Radio 3- if you/someone knows which neighbourhood would be like BBC Radio 4? I find R3 too high brow for me - Radio 4 seems more accessible :)

    • petercooper 11 hours ago

      First place that jumps to mind is Richmond! Radio 4 is certainly more "chatty" while still being posh and Richmond is both posh and full of that street/café life.

      If we're going to fill out the roster, let's say Radio 1 is Camden, 1xtra is Brixton, Radio 2 is Bromley, Radio 5 is Dagenham, and 6music is eh.. I dunno, Shoreditch?

      • nicr_22 9 hours ago

        Radio 4 has to be Westminster, surely? And Bloomsbury in the evenings.

        Richmond teeters over into Classic FM to my taste - ostensibly cultured, but basically posh-pop.

        And LBC is a diffuse torroidal agglomeration of zone 3+ greasy spoons known only to White Van Men and black cab drivers.

        • petercooper 9 hours ago

          Maybe! I am not really an R4 listener and when I am, it's for the twee comedy stuff rather than the news and politics. If LBC is as you describe, though, I dread to imagine where Talk Radio is :-D

  • randomcarbloke 13 hours ago

    I don't think you're really supposed to go into the communal area without being a resident :) hence the quietness.

    • djtango 12 hours ago

      There are plenty of public spaces which are also really nice and calm considering you're pretty much in the thick of it. You can sometimes even hear the Guildhall students practising which is a lovely treat

  • fennecfoxy 13 hours ago

    Idk I find the area dirty & busy/litter everywhere, etc. But then many parts of London are like that compared to NZ (where we generally take care of the place better).

    It's not so bad once you head out into the counties either I suppose.

    • petercooper 11 hours ago

      I live far out of London, so I sympathise, but due to my family's pursuits, I mostly spend time in London in either Soho or the City, and compared to Soho, the City is a an immaculate paradise.. ;-)

    • randomcarbloke 13 hours ago

      your largest city is 9 times smaller than London, admittedly it has some dirtiness as all cities do but I'd say it's cleaner than Berlin (having worked there) which is a quarter the size, certainly cleaner than Paris (although Paris is larger of course), and cleaner than New York (also having worked there) which is fairly close in population.

      • Lio 7 hours ago

        > although Paris is larger of course

        That surprises me, I was under the impression that Greater London was a bit bigger than Greater Paris on most metrics.

        Unless you mean the City of London (The Square Mile) itself, which is definitely much smaller than Paris proper.

yardie a day ago

"There’s an underground parking garage for the residents, but half of it is empty and filled with 20-30-year-old cars whose owners are no longer known."

Years ago I bought a flat and it came with an underground parking garage. Once we were settled in I break the garage lock and inside was an old Peugot, cans of old motor oil, and all sorts of junk shoved in between the garage door cracks. It was hell to get rid of the thing. The tires were flat. No title meant no tow trucks wanted to touch it and no scrap yard was willing to accept it. After too many months I was able to get the city to declare the car derelict. And then I had to pay a scrap yard to accept it.

  • rtpg a day ago

    I _really_ appreciate Tokyo's system of basically forcing you to affirmatively declare your parking spot when you buy a car, on top of the usual "pay extra rent to have a parking space" thing that happens in many spots.

    While it doesn't stop cars from being abandoned "randomly", just the entire principle of having a paper trail for these things and creating a bunch of incentives to make sure that parking spots don't turn into trash heaps[0].

    Especially now that I live in a place where street parking is a prime resource and yet people _who have garages_ still choose to street park out of convenience...

    [0]: not always of course, I know about the trash houses

  • mrweasel 10 hours ago

    Kinda weird that it would hard to track down the owner of a car. Technically you can get the own from the VIN, which may be the estate for a deceased person. Getting them to actually take action is a different matter obviously

    • yardie 7 hours ago

      The last known address of the previous owner was the flat I was currently occupying, LOL.

      The flat was built and purchased in the 60s, abandoned in the 90s, and sold to us in 2010s. It was near a newly gentrifying, former industrial area. I think we went back and forth with the city for 10 months before they agreed to give me the paperwork that would allow it to be scrapped. I get that no one wants to get it wrong and accidentally throw someone else's property into the bin.

    • cjrp 7 hours ago

      In the UK, you can request a new V5 from DVLA (this doesn't give you ownership, you just become the "registered keeper"). The DVLA contacts the previous owner, if they don't respond you get a new V5.

  • smusamashah a day ago

    As a total noob about the cars or buying flats or the location you are from, my first though was that why didn't you get it fixed and drive it away. But you won't have the papers then. Do the scrap yards not accept it for the same reason?

    • yardie 17 hours ago

      It's very, very expensive to bring something back to operational after decades of neglect. Spend thousands of euros on a car worth at most 1000€

      Also, we already have a car. Why would I want someone else's scraps?

      • aziaziazi 16 hours ago

        Another card noon here, especially in urban motor driving so please excuse my ignorance. In that desperate situation isn’t it cheaper to call a friend to seat on the car and handle the steering wheel while you attach the car to yours with those rods, then pull it to a metal scrapper shop that buy metal by the weight? Without plate, isn’t that car basically a non car but a pile of metal?

        • yardie 8 hours ago

          If you let a car sit long enough, the rubber tires will develop a dimple. If you let it sit decades the tires will completely collapse. Now you are dragging a multi-ton steel sled with rubber nonskid pads instead of free rolling tires. Also, this is an underground garage. Not a ton of room to move around.

          > isn’t it cheaper to call a friend

          Its not moving a couple of boxes of furniture. I'd never seriously ask any friend to do this on a lark. Just pay the insured "expert" their fee so you don't have to assume any liabilities.

        • sjducb 15 hours ago

          If you don’t have a title or ownership history then people think the car is stolen. That’s why scrappers won’t take it.

          If you have a title then people will pay you to come and pick it up.

        • ponector 13 hours ago

          If you are irresponsible human being you can simply tow junk car to any other public location so it is a new problem for someone else.

          In our city there is a separate service where you can report abandoned car. They check, leave a note and one month later tow it to the special parking lot. Later it is sold at the auction or scrapped.

    • analog31 a day ago

      Most mechanics won't fix a car on site, and there might not be space to do so. Also, a car that's been sitting for that long can't be started without at least charging the battery, and probably, replacing it. Then one wonders how much they're going to have to invest on something that might never work and that they'll still have to pay to get rid of.

    • pjc50 14 hours ago

      Basically yes. However I'm sure the management company (roughly what americans would call a "condo association"?) responsible could change the terms given sufficient notice to allow them to remove and auction abandoned vehicles. I'm surprised they don't given how valuable a London car park is. Maybe they're not actually abandoned?

oniony a day ago

So strange to talk about the Barbican Centre as a curiousity and to not mention the greenhouse! I used to work around the area and would take 'short cuts' from the Barbican tube station through the Barbican Centre to the City. I got lost many, many times, would end up in dead ends, or the other side of lakes to where I wanted to be. Or stuck behind a metal gate I could not open. The place often taunts you with a view of right where you want to be but from behind a thin metal fence or gate that requires a key or fob.

Anyhow, one day I went a different way and there was this massive, tropical greenhouse. Kinda hard to believe if you've ever seen the place.

https://www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2025/event/visit-the-co...

  • farslan a day ago

    Op. The greenhouse was closed, hence I hadn't a chance to photograph the place. There are too many details about that place, and I only shared the pieces that I've had chance to thoroughly visit.

    • oniony a day ago

      Yeah, was not a criticism, merely a "and you think that's all weird, there's also this" kinda statement.

      • farslan a day ago

        All good, thanks for mentioning it. I really want to visit it. The tour guide said it's open on certain days/hours.

        • fch42 a day ago

          You can booked timed tickets at https://www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2025/event/visit-the-co... but when it's open on weekends, one can also often just walk in. It's a great place to visit. Entrance is free.

          As far as I'm aware, the Barbican Conservatory (Greenhouse) will close for refurbishment at a point next year though. When you go currently, they'll have details of the plans for public consultation. So see it while you can (or then again in 2030 or so).

  • mattkevan a day ago

    I love the greenhouse, it’s one of my favourite places in London. Walking around it, exploring the different levels and observing the plants covering the concrete and ductwork makes me feel like I’m in some kind of retro-futuristic space arcology.

    Such a contrast to the Sky Garden in the City which has all the charm of an airport departure lounge.

  • Angostura a day ago

    Don’t forget the only reason the greenhouse (conservatory) exists is to camouflage the fly-tower from the theatre stage below!

    • halfdaft a day ago

      It is! - except it's to hide the fly tower from the outside. The fly tower wasn't part of the original design. The first resident theatre company to be - the Royal Shakespeare company insisted upon one so the architects but came up with the genius idea of hiding it with a conservatory. I discovered this when working in the theatre space. I went exploring the fly tower (as you do) and opened a door at the top. I assumed I'd see some dark service corridor, but instead emerged into the warm, humid, nighttime air of a huge conservatory - it was easily the most magical architectural experience I've ever had.

      • satori99 a day ago

        I wasn't sure what you were discussing. Like, what is a fly tower? So I went down a barbican rabbit hole and found this part of a video, where one of the theatre fly techs describes the same thing as you!

        https://youtu.be/uDdTUBk-qjo?t=140

        • ralfd a day ago

          Can’t watch the video. What is a fly tower?

          • satori99 a day ago

            The 'flys' are the enormous curtains and backdrops used in theatre productions. They are raised and lowered to set new scenes in a production. They need a large space to be raised into, above the stage--which is known as a fly tower.

  • stavros a day ago

    Can you just walk in? Or do you need tickets? I see there are free tickets but they're sold out.

    • darajava a day ago

      Yeah you need tickets for the greenhouse. They're usually sold out for a few days ahead. You don't need a ticket for the rest of it though!

      • stavros a day ago

        Thank you!

        • lozenge 15 hours ago

          If you take the paid architecture tour, it does have a stop in the greenhouse, but the lights might be off/emergency lighting only.

          • stavros 14 hours ago

            That's probably fine if it's in the day, no?

  • comprev 14 hours ago

    Like walking around Venice - I spent more time retracing my steps than moving forward :)

  • jaqalopes a day ago

    Sounds like the perfect setting for a souls-like game.

  • phatfish a day ago

    In the days where work events were worth attending, we had one at that conservatory. It is indeed worth a visit.

rjmunro a day ago

I'm surprised the article doesn't mention the concert hall. It's one of London's most famous, with almost 2000 seats, and it's the London Symphony Orchestra's main home.

Until last lear, The Lead Developer conference (https://leaddev.com/) was held there, but it's moved to a larger venue for this year (I don't think the size of the main hall was the problem, it was the areas for break out etc.) They had a great talk about the history of the place: https://leaddev.com/leadership/you-are-here-the-story-of-the...

The Barbican Theatre is one of the London homes of the Royal Shakespeare Company, although they are looking to

  • libraryofbabel a day ago

    The concert hall and theater is indeed the main reason most people who aren’t residents end up in the Barbican. When I lived in London it was almost a classical music rite of passage to get completely lost on the wrong concrete overhead walkway while rushing to get to an LSO concert there.

    Unrelated, but recently the complex has been appearing in the general consciousness again as the excellent Apple TV series/spy novels Slow Horses (about a bunch of outcast MI5 agents) is set near there.

    • ssalazar a day ago

      The Agency on Showtime also prominently features the Barbican as the protagonist's residence with a number of great exterior shots.

  • sdenton4 a day ago

    (Indeed, Belle and Sebastian's "If You're Feeling Sinister - Live at the Barbican" is my favorite B&S album, and is quite a lot better than the original studio recording. So the Barbican has an odd warm place in my heart despite knowing nothing more about it until today.)

    (That same Live at the Barbican album is weirdly hard to find because it was a damned Apple Music exclusive. Travesty...)

  • farslan a day ago

    OP here. I hadn't a chance to visit it. Because of that, I also don't have any photos from there. But good point. I actually just received one of the books I recommend at the end of the blog post, which actually goes into the Barbican Event centre in more detail.

  • te_chris 14 hours ago

    Worth pointing out that, as a concert hall, it's extremely mediocre acoustically ( same as the Royal Fesitval Hall) - albeit pretty and I love it dearly. There was a plan to build a new, proper concert hall but it got scotched. Probably deservedly but it would've been wonderful to have a concert hall worthy of our musicians and enesembles.

    • PaulRobinson 12 hours ago

      It's a pretty great theatre, and I also love it dearly as is. I don't mind the acoustics generally, but aware that some people moan about it.

      I'm not sure there is a really, really great concert hall from an acoustics perspective in London. Back in Manchester I loved the Bridgewater because it was designed to be acoustically good no matter how many people were in the audience. I can't think of anything that modern and carefully thought through, so I tend to look for smaller venues with more "classical" approaches to acoustics (Wigmore, St Martins, and so on). Where do you like?

  • curiousgal a day ago

    Too bad the staff of that hall are completely incompetent. Put me off going there ever again.

DrakeDeaton a day ago

Part of the thinking behind the Barbican's somewhat hidden entrances to the estate and tts maze-like layout was that they would reduce foot traffic, and it totally worked. Not many people use the public estate high-walks as a shortcut to get across the City. This has a wonderful effect wherein you're surrounded by the hustle and bustle of the City, while being just a touch insulated from it.

I lived there for the better part of a year and it completely changed my perspective on living in London. More city-life should be like the Barbican.

  • crabmusket 19 hours ago

    I visited after having read Jane Jacobs the year before and becoming quite sympathetic to her vision of city life and active neighbourhoods through mixed uses. The Barbican felt like the philosophical opposite.

    I read somewhere, I wish I could remember where, that some urban designers in the 60s had the feeling that people should spend their recreation time in their private homes rather than outside.

    The Barbican felt like it had achieved that ideal of lifelessness, with bizarrely large and featureless open spaces, scant seating, etc. Of course that contrasted with the spaces around the arts centre which were bustling.

  • justincormack a day ago

    The whole city was supposed to be covered by high walks, but few are left and the plan didnt work.

    • freyfogle a day ago

      If you know where to look there are still a few old wall maps left in the Barbican that show the old high walks

  • iamacyborg 16 hours ago

    You don’t need maze-like entrances to make places quieter, people’s laziness will do the work for you.

    I lived for a while on Bedford Avenue between the British Museum and TCR and it was dead quiet, despite the location.

rriley a day ago

The Barbican is such a striking example of an architectural utopia, built not just as housing, but as a statement about how people could live, work, and engage with culture in one integrated space.

Few others worth exploring...

Walden 7 (Spain): A labyrinthine, colorful complex by Ricardo Bofill with inner courtyards and skybridges, aiming for a more social urban life based on B.F. Skinner's Walden Two philosophy.

Arcosanti (USA): Paolo Soleri’s desert experiment in “arcology”, architecture + ecology—exploring sustainable living in a compact footprint.

Unité d'Habitation (France): Le Corbusier’s "vertical garden city" combining apartments, shops, and communal spaces into one concrete megastructure.

Habitat 67 (Canada): Modular housing units stacked like Lego, Moshe Safdie’s vision for dense yet humane urban living.

Auroville (India): Founded in the 1960s as an experimental township aiming for human unity beyond politics and religion.

  • tweetle_beetle a day ago

    I'm not sure how to feel about most of those these days. They are iconic and I'm glad that experimental ideas actually made it to completion, but ultimately they have failed at reimagining life for ordinary people.

    In the cases of the buildings, over time their value has increased faster than an average dwelling in the vicinity, making them more exclusive and restricting access to those higher and higher up the socio-economic ladder - effectively turning them into gated community without the residents needing to feel the guilt of living behind physical gates.

    The buildings are still there, and they have inhabitants, but the investment potential has long outlived any philosophy. I guess you could argue there are some secondary effects from their influence, but I wonder how the architects would feel today.

    See also Park Hill https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park_Hill%2C_Sheffield

    • Arkhaine_kupo 13 hours ago

      That hardly seems like a slight to the proyects but the lack of systemic larger changes no?

      The barbican was created as a council proyect for middle class people. Nowadays council houses are considered only for destitute families. So of course the priorities, prices, and accesibility of thsoe houses is very limited compared to what you could do with a proyect like the barbican.

      I think with inflation on mind the average salary would be like 70k, which is way above UK average, but certainly very accesible to a large number of working professionals in the UK. There simply is not something half as good for that money being built nowadays in the UK. So obvs Barbican increases in price when there is no analagous purchase possible.

    • eru 15 hours ago

      For a more positive example, you might look at what the 'Housing and Development Board' managed to put up in Singapore. See eg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pinnacle@Duxton and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_and_Development_Board in general.

      However, I feel like HDB should declare victory and go home.

      • lmz 11 hours ago

        I don't think that Pinnacle project in particular is one to use against "over time their value has increased faster than an average dwelling in the vicinity, making them more exclusive and restricting access to those higher and higher up the socio-economic ladder".

        It's not gated but it definitely is not affordable now. The first owners probably felt like they won the lottery.

        • zhivota 6 hours ago

          Agreed, stuff like Punggol town is IMO much more accessible and interesting. It's truly an awesome place, affordable, well connected with transit as part of its design, etc.

    • mavhc 13 hours ago

      I assume they'd be confused that if their test project produced good results, why wasn't it widely replicated?

      They're mostly too expensive because they're rare

frereubu a day ago

The apartments are lovely, but the service charges are eye-watering, ranging from around £6,000 per year for a two-bedroom, to £14,400 for the more expensive ones:

https://themodernhouse.com/sales-list/thomas-more-house-ii

https://themodernhouse.com/sales-list/Lauderdale-Tower-II

https://themodernhouse.com/sales-list/willoughby-house

https://themodernhouse.com/sales-list/ben-jonson-house-iii

And all are sold on that weird UK feudal relic, leaseholds, so you're just buying for a certain number of years - a couple of the ones above only have ~80 years remaining.

  • IshKebab a day ago

    Oh no. £14k/year. I guess I won't buy that £2.5m central London flat after all.

  • devnullbrain a day ago

    The inaccesibility for mere mortals ruins any claim it has to being a representative of brutalism, IMO. Of course it looks nice, it was made by the City of London at eyewatering cost with absurd levels of craftmanship. The movement wouldn't have such a bad image if other buildings had that kind of budget for upkeep and gardening. But they don't: they're rotten and barren.

    • eru 15 hours ago

      It doesn't actually look nice in person, and the craftsmanship ain't anything to write home about. (However I can believe the claims of eyewatering cost.)

      The shoddy windows are particularly easy to spot, even in the pictures in the article. I'm not even sure these would be legal in Germany.

      • pjc50 13 hours ago

        Hmm, I can't make out the windows. I did used to know someone who lived in City of London flats with single glazing on the thirteenth floor. Nice view but you could feel the heat leaking out and the wind battering them if the weather got up. UK is desperately unserious about windows.

      • fennecfoxy 13 hours ago

        You're being downvoted for calling the Barbican a rotting piece of shit that's slowly falling apart.

        I think it's a cool building for sure, but like many buildings in the UK (including people's houses) it isn't well taken care of and you can see how grotty the surfaces are on the facade, how things need to be repaired & fixed.

        I'm looking to buy a house here and walking down streets of so many areas it's just crazy how people don't take pride in water blasting their driveway or the facade of their house, even things like fixing broken/cracked windows.

        And then stupid fucking trends like extending your house with an open conservatory and treating it like another normal room...a single layer of brick in a country that gets cold & wet in Winter! What the hell!

  • pledg 20 hours ago

    That’s on the cheap end of zone 1 London for service charges, especially anything with a porter and gardeners. If you were buying now you’d renew the lease for about £20k, which is a tiny fraction of the purchase price you’d be paying. (Source: did it in 2022)

  • eru 15 hours ago

    If you don't already own a flat in the Barbican, but plan to move there, than the service charges and the leasehold are immaterial to you.

    If they lowered the service charges tomorrow, that would just mean that the headline market price of the apartments would go up to compensate.

    If they moved from leasehold to freehold tomorrow, you would also see that reflected in the price.

  • nbevans a day ago

    6k is pretty typical for any premium apartments in London. That's actually pretty cheap for that location.

    • lozenge 15 hours ago

      Half of the population of the City of London (aka the square mile) is in the Barbican. There is hardly any location to compare it to.

      • walthamstow 12 hours ago

        There's quite a lot of housing just outside the City boundary in Shoreditch and Farringdon, the latter being easily comparable to Barbican as it's the next stop on the tube.

mrtksn a day ago

My office was right next to Barbican, I was going to rent a place there but I cheaped out. Still bitter about it.

The thing about Barbican is that it is an opinionated living complex. People who built it had an idea on how the urban living is supposed to be and sculptured that in concrete. Very few things are changeable there, that's why it also feels like a different time.

I enjoyed walking from my office to the tube and get amazed by this giant place everyday. Never seized to amaze me. I would occasionally go there and work at the public places, it was often empty enough to find corners or passages where I can just observer the life happening in distance.

Here's a couple of photos: https://dropover.cloud/09cb4c

Ericson2314 a day ago

One thing that I think is underappreciated as a distinguishing factor of brutalism is how three-dimensional it is.

Whether its the Barbican, or "Grad Center" at Brown University, there are all sorts of elevated walkways that you can see from other levels, defying "every floor is like every other floor" expectations.

I think I have vague memories of when being a small child, being filled with wonder at various municipal buildings that did this. Though my memory hazy and I cannot remember the specific buildings.

  • bobthepanda a day ago

    These became less popular over time due to cost and safety reasons.

    Interbuilding passageways complicate future renovation and redevelopment, and spreading eyes on the street thinly makes all walking areas harder to secure.

    • the_mitsuhiko a day ago

      > Interbuilding passageways complicate future renovation and redevelopment

      They are also incredibly inconvenient. London had many walkways because they wanted to give cars priority, and they largely became unused and became a source for litter.

      • bobthepanda 14 hours ago

        They can be done well but it has to be thoughtful.

        Passageways in Hong Kong are popular, but that’s because the pedestrian density is so high they manage to fill both the skywalk and street level. The passageways provide shelter from tropical sun and rain, sometimes even air conditioning. And it’s a very hilly city anyways, so often you are picking between walking uphill on a plain sidewalk vs. doing it on a skywalk with escalators and elevators.

xnx a day ago

Possibly getting some more attention now because of some scenes from Andor 2 that were shot there: https://www.reddit.com/r/london/comments/1kb8k4u/lloyds_of_l...

  • sambeau a day ago

    The really amazing architecture of Coruscant is from the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Arts_and_Sciences

    In particular, the Museo de las Ciencias Príncipe Felipe.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Arts_and_Sciences#/med...

    • LeanderK a day ago

      I didn't enjoy the city of arts and sciences tbh, it felt disconnected, artificial, maybe almost totalitarian in its will to show off. I also thought that, if you look past the immediate effect, it just didn't feel that good looking. A bit similar to how I often feel about Zaha Hadids work.

      In comparison, in the barbican I felt like I could sit there for hours and enjoy the architecture. It has so many interesting details and aesthetically pleasing corners.

  • paulsmith a day ago

    Yep, and S1E7: https://moviemaps.org/episodes/9c8

    I was reading this post and thinking, huh, this would be a good set for a Coruscant shot in Andor, and sure enough ...

    • fmajid a day ago

      The Scarif transport network scenes in Rogue One were shot at London's Canary Wharf Underground station, however.

  • SideburnsOfDoom a day ago

    That and it's also in the spy thriller series Slow Horses

    which is good too, it's a mix of Black comedy and spy tension.

    • ukoki a day ago

      Michael Fassbender's character has an apartment there in The Agency as well

      • tialaramex a day ago

        Living in the Barbican seems so very typical for a spy that it'd be like a give away.

        James Bond obviously doesn't live there, but I can imagine any number of John le Carré's later characters (the early novels are set before it was built) would make sense.

pkd a day ago

This was great and the photos were good too!

I have a similar sort of fascination with a structure closer to me: Habitat 67 in Montreal. I have at various points considered buying a unit there but practicality prevents me from doing so each time. I don't know how long I'll resist.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitat_67

  • dllu a day ago

    Thanks for reminding me of this cool building --- I just updated the Wikipedia article with an infobox and a photo that I took in 2019.

  • porphyra a day ago

    I visited outside it twice but they are very strict with protecting the privacy of the residents, so you aren't allowed in. I could only take some photos from street level outside.

    • pkd 8 hours ago

      Yes, and I respect that. It has allowed it to retain its original purpose of being a living space first and an architectural curiosity second.

  • jgilias a day ago

    Curious, what are the practical concerns? The place looks fantastic to me!

    I really miss more bold architectural and city planning experiments. Like, I get it, if it’s a flop, it’s a pretty expensive one. But still, it feels like the design-space there is just really under-explored.

    Maybe there’s some AI-driven simulation way to explore the design-space and arrive at viable solutions before committing too much funds.

    One can dream.

    • pkd 8 hours ago

      Like OJFord mentions, it is a bit far from amenities despite the straight line distance to them not being great because it's built on an island in the river and you have to cross the bridge to get to the downtown area.

      But more importantly for me, my usual life is not in Montreal. I love Montreal but moving there would require quite a few sacrifices in personal relationships that I don't feel like making. And government services in Quebec are also worse than in Ontario (where I am now).

    • OJFord 10 hours ago

      Not GP but the linked Wikipedia page says though there's a private shuttle it's difficult to get into town on foot, so I'd guess it's concern that it'd be annoyingly secluded/disconnected at times.

mjamil a day ago

It is utterly weird to me that so many commenters here appreciate the Barbican's aesthetics. To me, it is an ugly eyesore that's a legacy of the brutalist wave of the mid-20th century. I lived close to it (in Islington) for many months, and avoided walking through it to get to the City (where I worked).

  • ljm a day ago

    Maybe because other brutalist estates in London aren’t nearly as well kept or, uh, wealthy, than the Barbican is. And perhaps it’s uncommon to wander through such estates when you don’t live in them.

    The old Robin Hood Gardens before they were demolished were quite unwelcoming, looking from the outside. You wouldn’t go anywhere near those kind of estates unless you were a resident, and you’d have a very different impression as someone who saw what it was like internally.

    • frutiger a day ago

      Heh, very strange to see someone mention this online. (I grew up in the non-Brutalist but nearby Aberfeldy Estate, and now live a few thousand miles away).

  • eszed a day ago

    Like - at least in my opinion - many brutalist buildings, it's ugly from the outside and gorgeous on the inside. I've explored it many times, and agree with everything in this article and in the positive comments in the thread. And... I kinda agree with you, too. What experience - interior or exterior - architects should prioritize is an interesting conundrum.

    • xixixao a day ago

      I agree the interior is nicer than the exterior.

      But it’s still dreary, in person, on a cloudy day. This style looks good in drawings, well lit and edited photos, but I think it’s a false/failed direction in living reality (specifically the facade, the building shape, “tunnels” etc).

      • eszed 16 hours ago

        > dreary, in person, on a cloudy day

        I mean, what isn't? :-)

        The tunnels are kinda ick, and there are other bits I don't like, also. There's a walkway I've ended up on a time or two that's just bare and windswept, and badly needs... Something to break it up.

        Still, though: I think I'd be pretty happy living there (even if it mightn't be my top choice). The (both design and amenity) positives outweigh the negatives, which I cannot say about many, many other parts of London. Do you disagree with that?

  • IshKebab a day ago

    It's definitely one of the least bad brutalist constructions. It's also quite nice if you're walking around inside it on the walkways.

    It's awful if you're walking along actual roads though. I would avoid it too.

  • gadders 11 hours ago

    It's not beautiful, but it's nowhere near as ugly as the South Bank Centre. I would flatten that in an instant.

  • cbeach 10 hours ago

    Brutalism was a reactionary movement against ornate Victorian and Georgian architecture, which was seen as elitist and emblematic of the "property owning class"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutalist_architecture

    > In the United Kingdom, brutalism was featured in the design of utilitarian, low-cost social housing influenced by socialist principles and soon spread to other regions around the world, while being echoed by similar styles like in Eastern Europe

    So beware the vocal minority of English socialists that have a politically-tainted take on this architecture.

    The rest of us agree with you. It's offensively ugly!

    • BoxOfRain 9 hours ago

      To me it's a totalitarian style, it tells people 'I'm unashamedly ugly and I couldn't care any less what you think about that'. It goes out of its way to be imposing and institutional as though it's designed not for humans but for entirely fungible economic resources who in time will be burned up and discarded.

      It's ironic the style is so strongly associated with socialism I think because it's much more 'dark Satanic mills' than 'England's green and pleasant land'.

grumpy-de-sre a day ago

One of the very few places in London that I ever felt truly at peace.

I think the heavy maze like structure was incredibly effective at blocking out the sound of the city and the water features / conservatory made it an amazing place to chill out for a relaxing lunch.

Not quite cyberpunk, not quite solarpunk but somewhere in between and utterly unique.

vr46 a day ago

I have many memories of barrelling through on skates with friends, and one of my favourite memories is of filming a mate skating through some flaming cones that another friend had made, basically mini molotov cocktails of small bottles filled with paraffin, we set them in a long line outside the church opposite the water and spent an hour skating around and filming ourselves. This was pre-2001, I cannot believe some of the shit we used to do.

Elsewhere in the place, I have loved going to exhibitions, theatre plays, gigs and the cinema. It's a one-stop cultural hub that evokes the glamour of flying in the olden days.

hnlmorg a day ago

I used to work on a top floor of the building next to it so had a first class view of the estate. Been there a few times and a friend used to live there too.

He would rave about the place but I’m not a fan of it personally.

Aesthetically it’s out of place and (in my personal opinion) a bit of an eye sore.

The maze like design seems fun at first but it’s less amusing if you’re the one who’s actually lost in there and have somewhere to be.

The apartments are small and impossible to get the temperature right (too hot in summer, too cold in winter).

But because its iconic people still pay an obscene amount to live there.

The on-site amenities are pretty good, but its central London, you’re not far from literally anything you could imagine or desire. So I’m not sure that’s as much a selling point now than it was when the estate was built.

It’s one of those places you’d have to really love in spite of its warts because it’s so impractical by modern standards.

  • dreghgh a day ago

    > The on-site amenities are pretty good, but its central London, you’re not far from literally anything you could imagine or desire.

    This is totally inaccurate. It's the business district. If not for the Barbican, the nearest serious art gallery, repertory cinema, music auditorium, are all around half an hour away.

    • NoboruWataya a day ago

      Half an hour is pretty much nothing in London. But if you factor public transport or cycling into the mix then there are loads of places you can get to in less than half an hour. For example about 10 minutes cycle to the south you have the Southbank Centre, BFI, Tate Modern etc.

    • hnlmorg a day ago

      I know the area well. It’s actually more like 15 minutes. Quicker if you take the tube.

      But even half an hour isn’t a long walk. ;)

      • dreghgh a day ago

        Go for it, which major art galleries, auditoriums and cinemas are 15 minutes from the Barbican?

        • lmm 21 hours ago

          No single big name (although the Guildhall gallery is underrated) but there are a lot of trendy small galleries in the Old Street/Shoreditch area. Sadler's Wells Theatre is extremely reputable and just up the road. There's an Everyman in broad street and two full-on arts cinemas by Shoreditch High Street. That whole area has changed a lot over the last 20 years or so.

        • hnlmorg a day ago

          Tottenham Court Rd is 10 mins by bike, 30mins to walk and less than 15 mins by tube.

          It’s also a route I’ve done often, hence how I know.

          And if you cannot find an art gallery, auditorium nor cinema in Soho then you’re doing something very wrong.

          • dreghgh a day ago

            There are many cultural centers in the West End, Kensington, and boroughs outside the City, but none of them are 10 or 15 minutes from the Barbican center (hence your not being able to name a single one).

            There is a theatre at Tottenham Court Road. It is over 30 minutes away from the Barbican centre by foot (but about 10 minutes by Elizabeth line).

            The nearest major art gallery to TCR is not in Soho, but 15-20 minutes from Tottenham Court Road. There are two other major galleries closer to the Barbican than anywhere near Soho. Both are at least 25 minutes by foot and at least 25 minutes by tube.

            There isn't an auditorium in Soho, unless you can name one? St-Martin-in-the-fields is no closer than the National portrait gallery, 20 min by foot or 15 by bus from TCR. Easily 25-30 minutes from the Barbican centre by any means of transport.

            Likewise there are several repertory cinemas in Soho but none of them are 0 minutes from Tottenham Court Road.

            Your claim of 15 minutes by foot was completely laughable. My claim of around 30 minutes in each case was accurate.

            • hnlmorg a day ago

              The problem isn’t naming them, the problem is you shifting goal posts by saying “major”. Which could just as easily exclude the amenities at the Barbican too, given “major” is an entirely subjective term.

              Also I never claimed 15 minutes by foot. And given how good public transport is in London, it’s a silly argument for you to make that we can only talk about out walking somewhere.

              Plus even if we were just talking about walking, as myself and others have pointed out to you, half an hour isn’t far to walk in central London. Londoners do it all the time.

              There really isn’t any need for you to be taking such an aggressive tone here.

              • dreghgh a day ago

                Name any art gallery which you think is a major art gallery, ie of comparable or greater size and prestige to the Barbican art gallery and is 15 minutes from the Barbican center, including by public transport?

                You can't, because there isn't one.

                You made an incorrect statement, and now you're defending it, but without providing any example at all of what you are claiming exists. So it's a little bit cheeky to claim that I am shifting the goal posts.

                • hnlmorg a day ago

                  Tate Modern: 10 mins by bike

                  https://maps.app.goo.gl/sdW7h8zMb7qj42Nd8?g_st=ic

                  But if you really care about art then you aren’t going to limit yourself to “major” art galleries (again, speaking from experience here).

                  This whole argument is absurd. I dont understand why you find it so controversial to claim that a flat in central London would be near pretty much anything you could want. Business district or not, I stand by my statement. If it weren’t true then people wouldn’t pay the premium to live in central London.

                  • dreghgh a day ago

                    Tate Modern (yes, it is definitely a major art gallery) is around half an hour from the Barbican center by foot, and around half an hour from the Barbican center by public transport.

                    Read my comment again:

                    > It's the business district. If not for the Barbican, the nearest serious art gallery, repertory cinema, music auditorium, are all around half an hour away.

                    Your single 'counter-example' is a serious art gallery, which is around half an hour away...

                    • hnlmorg 14 hours ago

                      It’s actually closer to 20mins by mass transit. As that link I shared demonstrated

                      Also I’d argue the Santander Cycles are a form of public transport (just not mass transit like buses or the tube)

                      https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/cycling/Santander-cycles

                      But honestly, you’re the first Londoner I’ve spoken to who considers 30 minutes by foot a long way away. Even by London standards, that’s close. For suburban dwellers, 30 minutes by foot wouldn’t even get them close to their nearest art gallery (and I don’t even mean “major” galleries either).

                      And your insistence on limiting things by “major” instances is odd. London has a strong culture of smaller independent amenities. Many of which are a lot closer than Soho and Southbank.

                      This is honestly the first time I’ve ever heard anyone complain about a zone one apartment being a long way from stuff.

                    • barrkel a day ago

                      Your strident tone isn't doing your position any favours.

                      You're a lot closer to everything in the Barbican than you are in Croydon or Enfield or Acton or Stratford.

                      London is big. The City is close enough to the centre that it is central, compared to most of London.

                      (Personally I think the Barbican is ugly, and I didn't like moving around in it, with long walkways forcing unnatural navigation. It only works, in so far as it works, due to a degree of elite mindshare capture keeping it owned and occupied by the wealthy. Put the same idea in Stratford and come back to somewhere far less pleasant in 20 years.)

        • philipwhiuk a day ago

          I mean there's a cinema, art gallery and auditorium in the Barbican Centre itself.

          In theory Leicester Square is a 15 minute drive. In practice you'd have to be mad to drive yourself but you could Uber it.

sagacity a day ago

What a coincidence, I just visited last week. The article's comment about it being hard to navigate is completely accurate but I found it to be fun. You may be getting lost, but there's always an interesting view towards another part of the building enticing you to go there... It's almost like the design of Breath of the Wild or something.

vkazanov a day ago

Oh... barbican...

Me and my 10 year old kid were playing quake 1 together, a map pack called Brutalism jam. Having discussed the style we went to barbican, saw the greenhouse and walked around the complex for a while.

The kid couldn't stop talking about it for months! Amazing place (also a surreal map pack).

chrisstu 4 hours ago

Nice article. I like the Barbican and have spent a fair bit of time there over the last 25 years. I even worked out how to get from A to B without getting lost. Not been recently though.

The appearance of various Barbican adjacent locations in Slow Horses was a nice touch. And very on-point given the nature of Slough House.

Do they still have the rubber foot pedals to make the water come out of the taps in the public loos? Of course, being the Barbican the loos smell appalling and the taps frequently don't work, but it's all part of the charm.

seanhunter 14 hours ago

I did my music postgrad at the Guildhall school of music and drama, which is in the Barbican. Fun facts:

1) Orlando Bloom did the drama course when we were there. Famous music students there include Bryn Terfel, Jaqueline du pre and tons of others.

2) I say we because my wife did a music postgrad there at the same time but we didn’t meet until we left even though we were once on the same openday concert program together. (My composition was chosen to represent the jazz courses so I was in a group that played that - my wife won a chamber music award so she was playing later in the concert with a guitarist, but us jazzers didn’t get to see that).

3) We didn’t meet because she did early music whereas I did the jazz course and all the lessons on the jazz course were underground. You may think I am joking but literally all our lessons were in the basement except for if we had a visiting musician do a masterclass (then they used to use one of the nice airy and bright above-ground rooms, some of which have a lovely view of the lake).

4) As well as the concert hall which people have mentioned, there is a theatre and at least 2 cinemas as part of the Barbican complex. If you know where to look there are parts of the old roman wall and at least 2 ruined medieval churches. You are also not far at all from one of London’s real hidden gems, the cathedral of St Bartholomew the great, a medieval cathedral down a little side alley near Smithfield market that tons of people in London don’t even know exists. Oh and for Americans, Benjamin Franklin once worked there as a typesetter[1]

My wife now teaches at the Guildhall. It’s a pretty special place especially this time of year when it’s nice. You can go sit out by the lake in the sunshine, watch the ducks etc. It’s really peaceful even though you are yards from old street, moorgate, liverpool street etc some of the busiest parts of london.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Bartholomew-the-Great

bschne 13 hours ago

If you wanna get some more footage of the buildings and inhabitants, I can recommend checking out Bêka & Lemoine's "Barbicania" --- https://vimeo.com/ondemand/barbicania

This site also seems to have lots of background info and details on various aspects of the buildings, though I haven't explored in depth --- https://www.barbicanliving.co.uk

  • farslan 9 hours ago

    TIL about this, thanks so much.

tetris11 a day ago

When people point to examples of bad brutalist architecture, I point them to the Barbican as a beautiful counter-example.

  • munificent a day ago

    My appreciation of Brutalist architecture seems to be in direct proportion to the number of plants it incorporates.

    A Brutalist building with zero plants looks like a totalitarian prison hellscape designed to destroy your soul before it destroys your body.

    A Brutalist building surrounded by trees with every nook containing greenery and vines dangling down looks like some kind of idyllic Star Wars planet populated by fuzzy hobbit-like creatures.

    I'm not sure why I find this effect so strong. Perhaps because flat gray concrete is aesthetically ambiguous. When paired with greenery, it looks like stone. In it's absence, it looks like industrial mechanism.

    • pjc50 13 hours ago

      Unfortunately without careful continuous maintenance the plants destroy the concrete. Whenever I see plants on one of these buildings that's usually a sign it's been abandoned. It has a post-apocalyptic HZD feel. Like the RBS Dundas Street "ziggurat". https://x.com/sallymiranda/status/1400883551751610381

      > Perhaps because flat gray concrete is aesthetically ambiguous. When paired with greenery, it looks like stone. In it's absence, it looks like industrial mechanism.

      Yes, this is the fundamental error of modernism/brutalism - the belief that flatness and the lack of ornamentation is beautiful. It can be .. but only under optimal conditions, like the concept art. "Material design" for buildings. As soon as it gets a bit weathered and dirty it becomes merely drab. Plants provide some organic variation over the surface, breaking up the now-dirty "clean" lines.

    • chilmers a day ago

      Agreed. I think greenery and water enhances most architectural styles, but Brutalism is the only one that absolutely _requires_ it. I wonder how differently the perception of the style would be if the Brutalist estates in the UK that became a byword for grimness and ugliness had been embowered and properly maintained by their housing groups and local councils.

      • BoxOfRain 9 hours ago

        There's only so far you can economically maintain a building of bare concrete in a damp maritime climate like the UK I think, the porous material is just going to be a nightmare when it doesn't dry out for much of the year.

        I don't like Brutalism in general, but it looks a lot less ugly somewhere sunny like Spain or the South of France than the UK in my opinion.

      • pjc50 13 hours ago

        For many modern buildings, the concept art used to sell it to the planners has a lot more plants in than actually get planted, or survive the first year.

        > embowered

        I think this is a typo for "empowered", but it's also a great word for covering something with trees.

    • empath75 a day ago

      With greenery on it, the concrete takes on the aspect of a cliff or a rock face, so it feels more they homes were carved out of stone, than poured out of a truck.

  • rwmj a day ago

    And the Brunswick Centre (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_Centre) which is not too far away. Having said that the exceptions don't make the rule.

    • ddalex a day ago

      The Brunswick Centre is one of my favourite parts of central London

    • notahacker a day ago

      Centre Point and it's lesser known baby brother One Kemble Street are pretty attractive buildings too though the former has the characteristic brutalist issue of not being great at street level. Depending on where you approach it from, the Barbican can have that issue too...

    • ninalanyon a day ago

      Exceptions prove the rule. Prove means test.

      • gwern a day ago

        Note that he did not use the expression you are criticizing him for misusing.

        The rule is the rule, and exceptions are the exception. Exceptions do not make the rule, by definition, so if your only defense of Brutalism is to say 'look at this one exception out of the tens of thousands that got built, which doesn't suck!', then you have conceded the point about Brutalism sucking.

ChuckMcM a day ago

Interesting that they took out the hospital/clinic ? Seems like it would be useful. In the US there are 'golf course to the grave' type communities for adults who want to go smoothly from the 50's into the afterlife. And when I was a teen I read Silverberg's book "The World Inside"[1] which postulated the "Urbmon" a complete community in a single structure. That has always fascinated me, the question of "Can you build a carbon neutral self sustaining human community?" I presume you can but how effective would it be? The Barbican looks like an interesting take on mixed use.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_Inside

nephrenka 4 hours ago

Fascinating! I spent the past two days at a software conference in the Barbican. (The SDD conf). The place is truly beautiful in a brutalistic way. Had lunch in the greenhouse.

moomin a day ago

Always great to see more people who love the Barbican as much as I do. A gloriously inventive space that feels like it comes from an alternate timeline. There’s also an integrated complex including a theatre housing the RSC, a concert hall that hosts the LSO, a library and I think a cinema.

Fun fact: a good chunk of the video to “As It Was” was shot there.

Reason077 a day ago

There’s a pretty great cinema and theatre / concert hall complex in the basement too, which I can recommend visiting. Oh, and a tropical garden (Barbican Conservatory)!

trainyperson a day ago

The Barbican is one of my favorite places on Earth and this post in a simple way does such a good job of capturing the beauty and wonder I associate with it. Others have mentioned the greenhouse and the concert hall; I’ll the exhibition space which consistently hosts great exhibits including the only good AI-themed museum exhibit I’ve ever seen (and it was back in 2019).

For those interested / invested, they recently launched a Barbican renewal project: https://www.barbican.org.uk/our-story/press-room/barbican-un...

SirFatty a day ago

"There’s an underground parking garage for the residents, but half of it is empty and filled with 20-30-year-old cars whose owners are no longer known."

Of all the great information, that's the bit that sticks in my mind for some reason. I'd like to pics of that...

jbl0ndie a day ago

Every detail of the Barbican is a joy. Even the skirting board where the wall meets the flooring is gently curved, making it a easy to clean.

Another fun Barbican fact is their Garchey System for waste disposal.

The wet food waste is collected communally and taken away by custom-built tanker vehicles that connect to the holding tanks. https://www.barbicanliving.co.uk/barbican-now/garchey/the-ga...

itissid 11 hours ago

There is a giant indoor climate controlled greenhouse which allows visitors that has a heated patio in the middle to sit. Makes a great place to lounge in the winters.

probabletrain a day ago

> all the photos where shoot with the Leica M11 + 35mm Summilux FLE

These photos look great, but I'm having a hard time figuring out exactly why.

The Barbican certainly looks better here than from what I remember of seeing it through the naked eye.

  • Karrot_Kream a day ago

    Whether this was done on-camera or in post, there's color grading happening here. The moody, almost film-like quality present in these pictures is also really popular in high production TV shows right now. Also a good eye for fun compositions, like the shot with the wall/barrier present in the left to offer the feeling of being closed or restricted.

    Notice how the shadows are somewhat teal-tinged and the contrast is toned down. There may or may not be some grain or vignetting added in post as well. There are Lightroom color profiles that can get this sort of color feel on application. But the compositions and natural lighting are pure photographer skill to chase.

  • munificent a day ago

    Good camera + good lens + good photographer + good processing.

    Photography is a deeper, more subtle art than a lot of people realize. Two people can take a picture in the exact same location and time and get wildly different results.

    • enneff a day ago

      It’s hard to explain just how nice Leica lenses can be in the right hands. There is a reason they have a cult like following.

      • munificent a day ago

        Oh, yeah, but oof the price.

simgt 16 hours ago

Never Too Small has an episode on a renovated flat in the Barbican: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2L0uML715dE

I personally love the brutalist and gigantic architecture of this time. Jam pack the flats, leave space for nature and public areas around it. Fairly standard in developed Asia, rare outside of ghettos in the West. Every time I discuss it with others, it's a hard sell against the "bbq with your neighbors in your back garden" so many aspire to by moving in suburbian houses.

KaiserPro a day ago

RANT ALERT:

The barbican is odd, mainly because its the only brutalist "council housing estate" that actually mostly worked as intended[1]

If you compare the layout/style to say the haygate estate (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-13092349 where attack the block was filmed) or the lesser known aylesbury estate, its more enclosed, but no less brutalist.

What is different is that unlike the southwark estates, it always had the original tenancy requirements upheld (either by tenant action, location or happenstance.) [2]

This meant that it didn't have the massive abandonment in the 90s, left to rot throughout the 00s. The quality of the haygate estate was actually pretty high, secure entry, gardens for the low rise, district heating, trees and playgrounds.

What was fucked up was that the heygate was a dumping ground for undesirables. this mean a spiral of drugs, crime and antisocial behaviour. The barbican escaped most of this because people were too fucking posh.

The social life of the barbican was upheld because of the huge amounts of money poured into the cultural centres that are hidden (and I mean hidden, the place is a fucking impossible maze) Most of the tenant social clubs were disbanded on the other estates, and the halls sold off or leased out to businesses.

In many way, the barbican isn't a great estate in terms of building quality. Its the same as any >60s council property. They all had to be big enough, have a separate kitchen and decent storage.

[1] well its not a mixed class housing estate, its all full of posh design types, and a handful of tenants left over from the 80s

[2] to get a council house, you had to be of good standing, and have a job. It wasn't a place to dumo drugadicts or problem families.

TLDR: the barbican is decent housing because it was reasonably well maintained, and wasn't filled with families in distress, or habitual criminals. We need to build more council estates to the same standard, with the same rules as the 60s.

  • eilzo a day ago

    The Barbican was never built as social housing - the intended occupants were always central London professional workers and they charged market rates.

    • KaiserPro a day ago

      Thats my point, because it wasn't run within the confines of the 1970+ social housing straight jacket (funding not dependent on tenants, no ability to control who was placed in there, centralised funding formula that meant you might gets loads of money one year, and none over the next ten.)

    • notahacker a day ago

      Which in a way actually does align with the OP's view on why it never became known as a dangerous sketchy place.

      Much more thought gone into the aesthetics of the Barbican than the Heygate Estate though, which is why the Heygate Estate was the one that ended up as every film scout's first choice of "scary, deprived place" even though it reportedly actually wasn't bad by the standards of south London postwar estates. And that's before taking into account the Barbican's arts facilities and all the money spent maintaining its communcal areas

      • empath75 a day ago

        Yeah, there's an _artistry_ to the barbican that isn't captured by just listing off the features of the complex and apartments. Whoever designed it had excellent _taste_.

        • KaiserPro a day ago

          I mean kinda.

          But a _lot_ of council estates were well designed, but suffered from failed assumptions. The underground parking in the barbican for example was the same design that cause so many issues for estates elsewhere. They were hidden and that meant crime, unless there was tight access control.

          https://modernistpilgrimage.com/2015/10/18/trellick-tower-lo... The trellick tower is fucking ugly on the outside, just like the barbican, but even the trellick has some smashing design features. Like most estates at the time, the three bed flats had an upstairs. Not only that, they were bright! Had a balcony.

          The difference between the trellick and the barbican is the barbican had middle class people growing plants on the balcony. Until the hipsters moved in, the trellick just had shit.

          https://municipaldreams.wordpress.com/ has some brilliant insight into council housing, the history, the plans and lots and lots of pictures.

          I think the biggest thing to take away is that for a long while council housing _had_ to be better than private. It was partly slum clearance, partly vote winning, partly "you fought for this in the war" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker_Morris_Committee has the general plan.

          Separate kitchens, storage, decent square footage, working heating as a _minimum_ something which even 500k flats struggle to do now.

Karrot_Kream a day ago

> Leica M11 + 35mm Summilux FLE

I've never shot Leica. Is this color grading something you can pull straight out of the camera, or is this applied in post?

(Also wow that is expensive kit.)

  • farslan a day ago

    People always ask which camera or lens I use, hence I added it upfront. Leica's are expensive I agree. It was a dream of mine to use it though for almost two decades. I finally was in a position to get it three years ago.

    To your question, the RAW's, unprocessed files are not like this from a Leica. You need to color grade (photographers say "post processing"). Color grading is used mostly for Video. In Photography, there are a lot of other things, it's mostly about light, not color. Highlights, Shadows, Contrast, Blacks/Whites etc.. Of course colors are also very important.

    If you want good colors straight out of the camera, you could look into FujiFilm.

    • Karrot_Kream a day ago

      > If you want good colors straight out of the camera, you could look into FujiFilm.

      This is why I was asking. I've never shot Leica so was curious if Leica worked like Fuji and offered interesting color profiles in body.

      > Leica's are expensive I agree. It was a dream of mine to use it though for almost two decades. I finally was in a position to get it three years ago.

      Yeah sorry I don't mean to throw shade with that comment. Your compositions are great and interesting and your moments seem deliberate. Artistry went into this, these are good photos :)

    • Etheryte a day ago

      That's exactly why I carry Fuji, but at the same time, their camera lineup is all a bit wonky. The features are split between a number of models, but none of them carry a good subset for me. I wish they made an X100VI with a removable lens, so in essence an X-Pro4 or similar, but it doesn't look like that's even on their roadmap. I like the form factor, dig that it has IBIS, but really wish I could slap different glass on it.

eru 15 hours ago

I used to live just off Old Street and worked in the City, so I frequently passed by the Barbican when I walked to work.

It's an interesting place to be sure, but I wouldn't praise it nearly as much as the article does.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43966676 expresses some of what I felt.

mullingitover a day ago

Not mentioned in the article, but this was what J. G. Ballard's novel (and later film) High Rise was based on.

tim333 a day ago

I have fond memories of classical concerts there when it was the place to go.

It was also the setting for part of Harry Styles As It Was https://youtu.be/H5v3kku4y6Q

A_Duck 12 hours ago

I live here — what I love most is the sense of excitement for a different and better future which runs through the neighbourhood.

There's a lot less of that feeling out in the world of 2025 but you can still find it if you look.

derriz a day ago

(Not very) interesting that the author of the piece refers to it as "Barbican" while I've never heard it referred to without the definite article - i.e. "The Barbican". Is there any significance to this?

  • cal85 a day ago

    The building complex is always called “the Barbican”, but the surrounding map area and its tube station are named just “Barbican”. Also, the arts theatre place within the Barbican seems to be officially named “Barbican Centre” (but people always say “going to see X at the Barbican”).

    • derriz a day ago

      That makes sense. I still find hard to imagine saying something like "I live in Barbican" if I didn't live in _The_ Barbican. But going to "Barbican" if traveling by tube would be obvious.

  • farslan a day ago

    You’re right. I submitted it as The Barbican here, because that felt more natural for me. I just updated the title of my blog post to The Barbican as well

jjani 19 hours ago

The stunning architecture is what makes it unique. Truly beautiful and one-of-a-kind, it's a work of art. Most of the functional stuff mentioned (underground parking, cradle to grave amenities, online community, (music) academy inside the complex) is bog standard living in much of Korea, and I imagine modern China as well.

Animats 16 hours ago

I've been there for two convention-type meetings, on completely different subjects but in the same space. I kept feeling I was in the private space of residents while trying to find a meeting room.

Never got up high enough to see the greenhouse.

graemep a day ago

I have lived there many years ago and it was amazing.

Theatre, concert hall, library, cinema and a few other things in the building. well kept gardens. Friendly and peaceful.

electrosphere a day ago

I often take my friends to the walkway where they filmed the Imperial capital scenes in Andor.

The Barbican is Coruscant.

zombot 14 hours ago

Beautiful.

The author misspelled Londinium.

  • farslan 14 hours ago

    Thank you! I've fixed it.

verytrivial a day ago

The video for the Dua Lipa track "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)" was shot on the estate for anyone interested in listening to that 2017 banger again.

earlyriser a day ago

It looks a lot like Mass Effect Citadel, with the water reservoir in the middle. I'm surprised to not found some link documenting if it was inspired by it.

arnab_optimatik a day ago

The events, cultural activities and especially some of the curated exhibitions at the Barbican have been outstanding. Highly recommend to anyone visiting London.

manmal a day ago

Having watched Slow Horses recently, I immediately recognized the building. My employer‘s HQ is near Barbican too, such an underrated part of the city.

EbNar a day ago

That's amusing... I learned about this building during my english proficiency exam, as the "listening" part narrated its story.

scoofy a day ago

I'm glad people appreciate the building. You all can have it... it's just not for me.

01HNNWZ0MV43FF a day ago

Ooh, another arcology. There's a little one in Alaska https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begich_Towers

  • didsomeonesay a day ago

    Oh that the was fascinating, too. From visiting more than a decade ago, I understand that most of the permanent population of Whittier lives there (except for some hotel employees) and that they have an underground passage connecting it with the school building opposite (so students in winter can get there without putting on a coat).

renewiltord a day ago

Fortunately, nothing like this will be built ever again because we wouldn't want to ruin the character of the neighbourhood.

walrus01 14 hours ago

People who enjoy the Barbican should also like SFU campus in Burnaby in metro Vancouver, and the well known concrete waffle on West Georgia St. The concrete waffle office tower was also CGIed into american nazi party headquarters in "The Man in the High Castle".

dgroshev a day ago

Two less mentioned sides of the Barbican that I love:

- how much design work was put into it. So many of it, from little bits and bobs (an awning, an electric socket, a doorframe), to the overall layout are unique to the area they are in and aren't copy-pasted elsewhere! It creates a coherent, but varying ensamble that is vibrant and alive, and is not just a grid of repeated elements.

- relatedly, how deeply organic the maze of the Barbican is. Contrast the raw concrete of the Barbican with the flowing lines of the Walkie-Talkie: one has an organic and smooth shape, but is really a 3D grid of repeated blocks; the other is made entirely of exposed raw concrete, but you never know what you will see around a corner. In this sense, the Barbican is more organic than most modern architecture. It's a place of wonder and surprise.

I love the Barbican.

hkt a day ago

It is a tragedy that this kind of visionary architecture isn't the mainstay of housing in the UK. I used to live in Park Hill in Sheffield, and the sheer beauty of those clean lines against a blue sky is hard to understate.

globular-toast a day ago

Odd use of "nit". Generally one nitpicks someone else's work, but I guess you can do you own nitpicking? Don't think this is common, though.

  • petepete a day ago

    For this crowd, maybe "all the photos where shoot with the Leica M11 + 35mm Summilux FLE btw" might be more apt.

    • farslan a day ago

      Funny because I always thought of `nit` as something like `btw`. It never occured to me it's actually an abbrevation of nitpick :) Learnt something new today. I'll fix it, thank you!

      (English is my second language, so stuff like this can happen sometimes)

mobiuscog 13 hours ago

Dropped in to see why Plymouth was being featured...

...left unsurprised.

SideburnsOfDoom a day ago

FYI, there's also a conservatory (A glass roofed garden room) on level 3

I was fortunate enough to be in there recently.

drcongo a day ago

Glad you enjoyed your visit, lovely photos too.

cbeach 10 hours ago

Even though it serves as expensive housing for private purchase, it still manages to exude Soviet central-planned estate vibes.

Walking around this imposing concrete structure, you feel its soullessness and brutalism. They made attempts to introduce greenery (like the temperate greenhouse area), but in the 21st century those areas are tired, poorly maintained and generally devoid of any visitors. The glass is misty or greening. The water features are stagnant. The concrete has aged poorly, with cracking and visible degradation.

London is full of beautiful Victorian and Georgian architecture, so brutalist concrete buildings look cringeworthy by comparison.. but they do seem to tickle the fancy of the socialist intelligentia, who love to proclaim how clever it all is - clever in a way that the common non-socialist folk simply wouldn't understand.

projektfu a day ago

No, it's definitely ugly and an abomination. One of London's worst and probably, unfortunately, historically protected.

  • eilzo a day ago

    To each their own :). One of my favourite places in London.

  • philipwhiuk a day ago

    It's far from the worst, but it's going up the list because we keep knocking them down.