logo
A dazzling new film shows the devastating reality of building with concrete

A dazzling new film shows the devastating reality of building with concrete

Fast Company04-08-2025
Watching the side of a mountain get blown to bits in the new documentary Architecton, the shock is not just from the explosion but also from the quotidian end result of such brutal force.
The film by director Victor Kossakovsky shows the industrialized violence involved in creating concrete, the most widely used building material in the world, tracing it backward from building to mountain source. [Image: courtesy A24]
Released in U.S. theaters on August 1 by A24, Architecton is a mostly dialogue-free film that documents the often-unseen production chain of concrete. It turns the process of creating concrete—the quarries, rock crushers, conveyor belts, and glowing furnaces—into spectacle. But it's a spectacle with a high cost.
Kossakovsky's dazzling shots have almost no measurable scale or frame of reference. They are reminiscent of the classic 1982 documentary Koyaanisqatsi or the photography of Edward Burtynsky. Like those works, Architecton uses its stunning visuals to comment on humanity's remaking of the planet, revealing what it takes to create the modern world we inhabit.
Subscribe to the Design newsletter.
The latest innovations in design brought to you every weekday
Privacy Policy
| Fast Company Newsletters
A short-term solution
The scenes in Architecton that show the slow transformation from mountain to rock to concrete are counterbalanced with shots of buildings made of raw stone. Roman-era marble columns and rustic stone buildings in centuries-old villages serve as Kossakovsky's rebuttal to the modern way of building with concrete.
Typical concrete buildings can last less than a hundred years. Kossakovsky calls them ordinary and ugly. 'We have a history of architecture [dating back] thousands of years. We can open a book and say that's a beautiful building. Why don't we put it in our city?' Instead, he says, 'We build strange rectangles from cement.'
Kossakovsky says the film was inspired by the Alexander Column in the main square of his hometown, St. Petersburg, Russia. Made from a solid, monolithic piece of red granite measuring more than 83 feet and weighing 600 tons, the column was erected in the 1830s in a feat of human engineering.
The filmmaker says he asked architects around the world why we don't build things this way anymore, and walked away disillusioned by their focus on speed, economy, and subservience to the will of developers. One architect, Italian designer Michele De Lucchi, stood out.
A member of the famous Memphis design group of the 1980s, De Lucchi is a proponent of building with stone, and he plays a kind of starring role in Architecton, which features him having a stone circle built into the ground of his backyard and visiting massive stone megaliths from ancient history. [Image: courtesy A24] An unsustainable cycle
Architecton presents stone building as one solution, but the main focus for Kossakovsky is the problem: heavily polluting, energy intensive, and short-lived concrete. 'The two biggest poisons of our time are sugar and concrete, in my opinion,' Kossakovsky says.
advertisement
To underline the problems he sees with concrete, Kossakovsky's film shows cities around the world where concrete apartment blocks have been turned to ruins, from earthquake epicenters to war zones. The film opens with a long sequence of aerial footage in bombed-out cities across Ukraine, including one devastating pan showing the side of an apartment building ripped open, exposing floor after floor of bisected living rooms.
Concrete is not the perpetrator of this particular brand of war crime, but Kossakovsky's film hammers the idea that buildings made from concrete simply aren't able to withstand the ravages of time. Tearing down these buildings after a few decades only to rebuild them for another few decades, the film argues, is part of the reason the climate has gotten so out of whack. [Image: courtesy A24]
One poignant scene shows caravans of trucks hauling the wreckage of demolished buildings into a dump site that sits immediately adjacent to a mountain being quarried for the raw materials that will be used to rebuild. The cycle is not sustainable.
But concrete is cheap to build with, and Kossakovsky says that's what keeps the cycle in motion. 'For whom is it cheap? For us it's cheap. For our grandsons it's expensive, because our grandsons will demolish it and build again,' Kossakovsky says.
Building from stone, he argues, may cost more up front but will last for generations, and create a deeper connection between buildings and the people who inhabit them. The impact on the Earth will be less violent than what's required to build the world with concrete. 'If you build something from stone,' Kossakovsky says, 'you only demolish the mountain once.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'KPop Demon Hunters' Smash 'Golden' by Huntr/x Tops Billboard Hot 100
'KPop Demon Hunters' Smash 'Golden' by Huntr/x Tops Billboard Hot 100

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'KPop Demon Hunters' Smash 'Golden' by Huntr/x Tops Billboard Hot 100

KPop Demon Hunters just went up, up, up to the top of the Billboard charts. 'Golden' by HUNTR/X soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the fictional group's first chart-topper and a historic moment as the first K-Pop girl group to reach the milestone, per Billboard. During the tracking week of August 1-7, 'Golden' racked up 31.7 million official streams, 8.4 million radio airplay audience impressions, and sold 7,000 copies in the U.S. The track, sung by EJAE, Audrey Nuna, and Rei Ami for the soundtrack to Netflix's smash animated film, also becomes the ninth song associated with K-Pop to reach the top spot of the Hot 100. COMPLEX SHOP: Shop the brands you love, anytime and anywhere. Uncover what's next. Buy. Collect. Obsess. The newly minted hit was preceded by 'Seven' by Jung Kook (featuring Latto), 'Like Crazy' by Jimin, along with BTS singles 'Dynamite,' 'Life Goes On,' 'Butter,' 'Permission to Dance,' and collaborations 'Savage Love (Laxed - Siren Beat)' with Jawsh 685 and Jason DeRulo plus 'My Universe' with Coldplay. 'Golden' is also the first No. 1 from a fictional act since 'We Don't Talk About Bruno' from Disney's Encanto in 2022, and the first by an all-women collective since Destiny's Child's 'Bootylicious' in 2001. Meanwhile, the film's in-universe rivals, the Saja Boys, climbed up to the Hot 100 with 'Your Idol,' performed by Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo, and Samuil Lee. Netflix confirmed last month that KPop Demon Hunters is now the streamer's most-watched original animated film ever, amassing roughly 132.4 million views since its release on June 20, and surpassing 2023's Leo starring Adam Sandler. Republic Records Official Store KPop Demon Hunters (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) LP $29.99 Republic Records Official Store KPop Demon Hunters (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) CD $14.99 Republic Records Official Store KPop Demon Hunters Picture Disc (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) $35.99 Republic Records Official Store TAKEDOWN 7" SINGLE (FROM THE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE KPOP DEMON HUNTERS) $17 Republic Records Official Store Golden 7" Vinyl $16.99 Republic Records Official Store Your Idol 7" Vinyl $16.99 The KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack is available for pre-order at Complex in a variety of formats—including standard black vinyl, double-sided picture disc vinyl, and CD. Also available are Huntr/x's 'Golden' on gold seven-inch vinyl, Saja Boys' 'Your Idol' on seven-inch purple vinyl, and Twice's version of 'Takedown' on violet seven-inch vinyl. ComplexCon returns to Las Vegas on October 25–26, 2025, with over 300 brands and live performances by Young Thug, YEAT & Friends, Peso Pluma, Central Cee, Ken Carson, and more. Get your tickets now. Related Products Republic Records Official Store KPop Demon Hunters (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) LP $29.99 , Republic Records Official Store KPop Demon Hunters (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) CD $14.99 , Republic Records Official Store Golden 7" Vinyl $16.99 , Republic Records Official Store Your Idol 7" Vinyl $16.99 Related News , Related News Kehlani Offering Free Laundry Services to Mothers in Celebration of 'Folded' Success LeBron James Big Ups Gunna's New Album 'The Last Wun' COMPLEX SHOP: Shop the brands you love, anytime and anywhere. Uncover what's next. Buy. Collect. Obsess. Making Culture Pop. Find the latest entertainment news and the best in music, pop culture, sneakers, style and original shows. Solve the daily Crossword

Kim Kardashian breaks down as Kanye West admits he stopped taking meds in trailer for rapper's explosive new doc
Kim Kardashian breaks down as Kanye West admits he stopped taking meds in trailer for rapper's explosive new doc

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kim Kardashian breaks down as Kanye West admits he stopped taking meds in trailer for rapper's explosive new doc

Startling footage of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West's deteriorating marriage is shown in an explosive new documentary about the controversial rapper. In the trailer for the doc 'In Whose Name?,' which dropped Tuesday, Kardashian can be heard crying as she tells West — who now goes by Ye — 'Your personality was not like this a few years ago.' West, whose been diagnosed with bipolar disorder but later claimed it was actually autism, also says he's been off his meds for 'five months now.' In another emotionally charged scene, Kim attempts to calm down an angry West after he says, 'Never tell me I'm gonna wake up one day and have nothing!' Kim replies, 'We can talk about that later, but,' before West interjects, 'It ain't no but!' The trailer also shows West's run for president, and him breaking down in tears during one of his Sunday Service spiritual gatherings that he hosted back in 2019. 'I would rather be dead than be on medication,' he bluntly says at one point in the trailer. 'Either they destroy me, or I destroy it.' 'They're killing our ability to think outside the box!' he later exclaims. The trailer ends with West saying, 'You know the best think about being an artist and bipolar? Anything you do and say is an art piece.' The doc is directed by Nicolas Ballesteros, who captured intimate footage of West over a period of six years. The documentary drops Sept. 19 in partnership with AMC, Regal and Cinemark theater chains. Kim, 44, and Kanye, 48, were married for almost seven years before their divorce was finalized in November 2022. They share four kids together: North, 12, Saint, 9, Chicago, 7, and Psalm, 6. In February, a source told Page Six that Kim was 'staying away' from her ex-husband as he continued to make headlines over his bizarre social media rants. '[She[ wants nothing to do with his drama,' the source said, adding that she found his social media antics 'disturbing.' 'Kim hasn't read all the messages Kanye posted because it's not worth her time and energy.' In February, the 'Gold Digger' rapper shared how his wife, Bianca Censori, helped him get an autism diagnosis after he doubted his bipolar disorder. 'My wife took me because she said, 'Something about your personality doesn't feel like it's bipolar, I've seen bipolar before,'' West said on the 'Download' podcast, noting that Censori was 'educated.' 'And come to find out, it's really a case of autism that I have.' Solve the daily Crossword

TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns
TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

TIFF pulls documentary about Oct. 7 attack from lineup over security and rights concerns

The Toronto International Film Festival has pulled from its lineup a documentary detailing one family's experiences of the Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas over footage rights and security issues, though the festival says it is still trying to work through those concerns with the filmmakers. In an emailed statement, the filmmaking team behind the documentary The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue, acknowledged the cancellation and told CBC News that they were "shocked and saddened" by the festival's decision. "Ultimately, film is an art form that stimulates debate from every perspective that can both entertain us and make us uncomfortable. A film festival lays out the feast and the audience decides what they will or won't see," the statement said. "We are not political filmmakers, nor are we activists; we are storytellers. We remain defiant, we will release the film, and we invite audiences, broadcasters, and streamers to make up their own mind, once they have seen it." In a statement Wednesday evening, TIFF CEO Cameron Bailey said he remained committed to working with the filmmakers to "meet TIFF's screening requirements" which would allow the movie to be aired at the festival this fall. The film, by Canadian director Barry Avrich, tells the story of Noam Tibon, a retired IDF general who is on a quest to save his son and his family during the attack that sparked the nearly two year long war between Israel and Hamas. Tibon's story has been told before in the media, including on CBS's 60 Minutes. His son, Amir Tibon, who is a journalist, also recounted the events from his own perspective in a book. WATCH | He moved his family to a border kibbutz — then Oct. 7 happened: According to Deadline, which was first to report the news, TIFF withdrew its invitation for the film to participate in the festival in part because some requirements for inclusion were not met, including the "legal clearance of all footage." "The purpose of the requested conditions was to protect TIFF from legal implications and to allow TIFF to manage and mitigate anticipated and known risks around the screening of a film about highly sensitive subject matter, including potential threat of significant disruption," the festival said in a statement to The Associated Press and Deadline. The ultimate dis-invitation, according to Deadline, came over the legal clearance and identification of footage of the attack that was filmed by Hamas. TIFF's Bailey also rejected claims of censorship, saying they were "unequivocally false," but apologized for any pain the removal of The Road Between Us caused. "Given the sensitive and significant nature of the film's subject, I believe that it tells an important story and contributes to the rich tapestry of perspectives in our lineup — stories that resonate both here at home and around the world," Bailey said in the statement. "The events of October 7, 2023 and the ongoing suffering in Gaza weigh heavily on us, underscoring the urgent need for compassion amid rising antisemitism and Islamophobia." Groups condemn decision The move has drawn condemnation from a number of organizations and officials. Creative Community for Peace, an entertainment industry organization that educates about antisemitism, called the decision to pull the film "deeply disturbing." "They are choosing to censor a Jewish story of survival and attempting to erase the experiences of survivors of the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust," the statement read in part. "This decision is part of a growing trend of silencing Jewish and Israeli voices under the excuse of 'security concerns.' " The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs' CEO, Noah Shack, also decried the decision, which he saw as the festival bending to the prospect of protests. "This shameful decision sends an unmistakable message: Toronto's Jewish community, which has long played an integral role at TIFF, is no longer safe or welcome," he said in a statement. Israel's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Gideon Sa'ar, also called the decision "vicious and sickening" in a post on X. And Stan Cho, Ontario's Minister of Tourism, Culture and Gaming, said in a statement posted to social media that he believed freedom of expression is "integral to the arts." TIFF pulled another documentary last year The festival also drew controversy last year over its decision to run — then pull — a documentary that followed Russian soldiers fighting in the war against Ukraine. The film, called Russians At War by Russian-Canadian director Anastasia Trofimova, attracted protesters who called the film Russian propaganda. After the festival paused screenings due to "significant threats," the film was quietly screened toward the end of the festival. Russians At War follows soldiers and medics on the front lines of the war, something the filmmaker says she did without the government's permission, which puts her at risk of criminal prosecution. Sean Farnel, a producer on the documentary who managed the film's distribution at festivals, told CBC News that the dis-invitation of The Road Between Us felt like "total deja vu," given what his team went through last year. He says decisions like these are becoming "endemic" within the arts world, and that it's increasingly difficult for documentary filmmakers to secure funding to tell difficult or provocative stories. "I think we all have to come together and figure out a way to present such work constructively, safely, because that's what festivals, that's what filmmakers do" Farnel said. LISTEN | 'Russians at War' director talks critics and backlash: His team recently made Russians At War available directly to audiences through a website that he says gives the film context. He says he feels fortunate that filmmakers at least have the option of circumventing the usual distribution channels in this way to give people a chance to view their work in the event that festivals are unwilling or unable to present it. Farnel says that before forming an opinion, people should see films being "censored or self censored" like Russians At War or The Road Between Us. "Watch the film, have an open mind, challenge your own biases and perceptions, and communicate with each other."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store