I don't like it, from a pure brutalistic view point this obviously doesn't make any sense, it isn't practical and it doesn't make any effort to create a shape that is esthetically pleasing. The urban decay is even more outrageous, the whole appeal of urban decay is that it is "real", it's the thinking about all of people that went through the same structure throughout the years. Of cause it doesn't mean you can't make art about or featuring urban decay, but you have to be smart about it.
gred 5 minutes ago [-]
> this obviously doesn't make any sense
That's debatable, but it's a moot point; it's pastiche, so it doesn't have the same goals or motivations as the original.
This man poured concrete around a power strip, chemically aged copper with ammonia, rusted rebar with peroxide, faked a damaged cable for vibes, and vibrated out the air bubbles with a dildo. This is the most unhinged and delightful Show HN I've ever seen.
ghm2199 6 minutes ago [-]
If you want to get a feel of what brutalist architecture is like up close, go to the Barbican in london if you can.
Its quite surreal. Very much in-your-face concrete exposure. Yet, to walk and experience it with your eyes is a study of contrasts: a giant, comparitively modern, greenhouse, has a glass roof open to the sky and yet many floors have no light or windows at all. And in the outdoor spaces, like the fountain/canal running through the complex the concrete will sort of be in the background and lets you focus on everything else: the water, the swans and the people around.
Juxtapose that to low hanging exposed concrete roofs and walls in closed passages could make one feel constrained/claustrophobic/yearning for light.
My favorite map is ‘One Need Not Be a House’ by Robert Yang, which was inspired by Louis Kahn's "brick brutalism" masterpieces in Bangladesh and India, as well as contemporary level design like The Silent Cartographer. The artist writes about their process on their blog post, https://www.blog.radiator.debacle.us/2026/01/one-need-not-be...
The map jam is standalone and uses custom assets so you don’t need a copy of Quake to enjoy it. Check the website for the ‘standalone’ variant.
Sorry for derailing! Cool laptop stand!
mock-possum 55 minutes ago [-]
Yang also regularly writes really interesting blog posts, mostly around game design. Very much recommend keeping tabs on him.
graypegg 21 minutes ago [-]
Oh man... I've never worked with concrete, but I would love to make a desk stand that looked like a little montréal métro station. They're all rather brutalist, and have flat tops haha
yeah i really want to try and make something like this. I was thinking of getting some spraypaint and making it look like part of it had been tagged with graffiti. Maybe one edge is broken so it looks like something I just found. I don't have the faintest idea of architecture styles, just thinking what would look cool and contrast with polished, refined, technology like a macbook or something.
gwbas1c 1 hours ago [-]
Related: Anyone know where to get that kind of keyboard in the photo? Specifically, where the number pad and arrow keys are on the left?
I've been looking and looking, but the best I can find is using a narrow keyboard with a separate number-pad only keyboard on the left. I'm in the US.
(It's better for your right shoulder to keep the mouse closer to your body like in the picture.)
ffsm8 9 minutes ago [-]
Personally I just switched to TKL keyboards (no numpad). While I did use it occasionally, it wasn't often enough to feel inconvenienced without it... All the buttons are still there after all, and if I'm already at home row, it isn't any slower.
May be worth considering too, especially if you're looking for a good keyboard with eg magnetic switches vs shitty rubberdome
swah 8 minutes ago [-]
Yeah I would suggest you stick some wood on your left side of your current keyboard, for a few days to see if you can adapt... I always used that space as a resting place, so having it occupied totally broke my flow.
(If I needed a numpad I would have it standing alone.. those are easy to find)
wmwragg 50 minutes ago [-]
I believe it's this keyboard[1] from Posturite, but doing a web search for "Left-Side Numpad" of "Left handed keyboard" should show a few options.
I went to https://www.keyboardco.com/ and searched for left-handed and the keyboard in the photo popped up, as well as a bunch of weirder and wonderfuler ones.
sam-bee 46 minutes ago [-]
The keyboard in the photo was bought from Amazon in the UK, as "Black Left-Handed Mechanical Keyboard".
I am indeed a right-handed user, which is why I want my mouse within reach on the right.
It's not clear what the change is, whether it is curation by hand or some other metrics, but it's a positive change, the old Show HN was getting flooded, as recently discussed. ( Although I can't work out how to find that discussion. )
sam-bee 38 minutes ago [-]
I'm glad to hear you liked the post!
vunderba 9 minutes ago [-]
This looks pretty funny paired with a sleek fancy MacBook though.
You need a proper Soviet-esque workstation of a laptop to sit on that concrete block - go get yourself a nice, chunky ThinkPad T530.
deafpolygon 46 seconds ago [-]
go visit any major “third world” country city … probably see those everywhere.
pjc50 1 hours ago [-]
I wonder what the practical limit is on how thin and light you can make concrete for non-structural items? I can see someone selling concrete mugs on Etsy, for example. Maybe with clever use of fillers and thin walls you could have a version of this you could actually lift. It looks great, especially in contrast to a white IKEA-style office.
Re: decay, I regret not taking more photos of the final days of the RBS "Ziggurat": https://www.edinburghlive.co.uk/news/edinburgh-news/stark-ph... ; at the end it had plants growing from much of the upper levels, making it look extremely Horizon Zero Dawn.
throwthrowuknow 1 hours ago [-]
People who make concrete counter tops use a lot of fibreglass fillers to get them fairly thin but if you wanted it truly light weight you’d probably need to make it out of a dense foam and coat it with something that looks like concrete.
urikaduri 26 minutes ago [-]
I've read that adding a little bit of graphene can make concrete much stronger, lighter and easy to shape, so would allow for thinner objects.
oh wow that takes me back. I remember touring, i think it was Texas A&M, in HS and they showed off their "concrete canoe" to the group. This would have been in the late 1900s.. 1995 or around there.
swiftcoder 1 hours ago [-]
> Maybe with clever use of fillers and thin walls you could have a version of this you could actually lift
You could likely also pour something like this out of aircrete, which would make it a lot lighter even at the same thickness
khalic 18 minutes ago [-]
Cool project, but not brutalist
goestoo 6 minutes ago [-]
It's hideous.
__mharrison__ 12 minutes ago [-]
This is cool. It's not for everyone and probably very heavy.
But I love the hacker feel of it.
quijoteuniv 8 minutes ago [-]
And while at it… Why not a concrete laptop case?
bpavuk 3 hours ago [-]
if we give it a little more polish, colder/greyer tones and "newness," it would fit very nicely for a Control fan :)
At first I thought you were talking about an actual rotating fan, which would be an awesome addition to this. Just a small PC fan running at a very low RPM built into the side in a circular cutout, with that worn metal patina look.
jesse_faden 2 hours ago [-]
as a control fan, i agree. the art direction in that game is something else.
The maze level on the original game has to be an all-time best level design.
polyterative 41 minutes ago [-]
My favorite video game of the universe.
jb1991 3 hours ago [-]
There are some subtly weak desks out there, quite a few actually, where placing this on top could be brutal.
ramon156 3 hours ago [-]
Next up: Brutalist desk
pjc50 2 hours ago [-]
I've seen quite a few blog posts of "old door on breeze blocks", the canonical brutalist/abandoned warehouse desk.
HPsquared 2 hours ago [-]
There are some subtly weak floors out there, where placing such a desk could be fatal.
rob74 1 hours ago [-]
Never mind placing it, bringing it to the place where it should be, er, placed might also be a challenge. Unless you can drive a forklift into your office...
sam-bee 60 minutes ago [-]
I took it to the office on a little trolley thing
rob74 1 minutes ago [-]
I didn't mean the laptop stand, I meant the concrete desk one of the parent comments suggested...
chasd00 4 minutes ago [-]
how much does it weigh? it looks like maybe 20-30lbs
I've seen people use the same technique and tooling for resin pours.
sam-bee 37 minutes ago [-]
If it works, it works
jagged-chisel 1 hours ago [-]
Vibration? Thought it was pretty common.
Rygian 1 hours ago [-]
The article does mention a very specific choice of vibration equipment.
jagged-chisel 1 hours ago [-]
Same method though. There's a plethora of vibrating things to choose from. I suppose you could mold a large silicone tentacle to put on a jackhammer, too, and use that to fish for bubbles in your cement soup. Call the tool what you want, you haven't changed the method.
sam-bee 45 minutes ago [-]
Yes, I did feel a bit silly buying and using it, but to be fair it did get the bubbles out.
crimsontech 3 hours ago [-]
This is pretty cool looking, I like it, it must be really heavy though.
> For a medium-sized piece like this, a vibrating dildo is actually the best thing to use. Just think of it like any other power tool.For a medium-sized piece like this, a vibrating dildo is actually the best thing to use. Just think of it like any other power tool.
I used work on foundations for warehouses, huge concrete blocks as anchor points and this is exactly how we got the bubbles out, we had a huge metal vibrator they call them high-frequency concrete pokers.
sam-bee 57 minutes ago [-]
Felt a little silly doing the work, but to be fair it did get the bubbles out.
masfuerte 19 minutes ago [-]
How much does it weigh?
progforlyfe 37 minutes ago [-]
I love it! I just wish I could enlarge the photos!
EDIT: ah, it works to right-click open image in new tab.
recroad 14 minutes ago [-]
Can't say I'm heavy into brutalist architecture and then sit on an Ikea chair
chasd00 33 minutes ago [-]
this is really cool, what a great Show HN. i will try to make one this weekend :)
jamesjolliffe 23 minutes ago [-]
This is so weird. I love it. Thanks for sharing!
smnplk 33 minutes ago [-]
Looks like a rat hideout.
qwertytyyuu 1 hours ago [-]
Is that surface concrete? Will it scratch the laptop?
sam-bee 44 minutes ago [-]
My laptop has little rubber feet, so it dosn't scratch on its underside. But yes, the piece is solid concrete, so you wouldn't want to bash anything fragile against it.
robotsquidward 55 minutes ago [-]
This is sick but sad that it has to live in that open office cubicle world :[
aquir 53 minutes ago [-]
Looks awesome! I like raw concrete. Plays well with the tech around it.
sam-bee 48 minutes ago [-]
Thank you!
WesolyKubeczek 14 minutes ago [-]
Should have stolen a broken piece of concrete off a street and repurpose it to be a laptop stand. At least that would be authentic, and contributing to urban decay at his location.
tokai 2 hours ago [-]
Isn't the ornamental 'urban decay' detail kinda the opposite of the utilitarian and functional style of brutalism?
seeeeebt 2 hours ago [-]
Yes, Sam is probably just having a bit of fun here, but I think it's worth presenting brutalism correctly as it's often so misunderstood.
Concrete is simply the mass production medium of the time, many of the patterns and moulds used in Barbican for example feature pretty timber imprints, scalloping patterns, painstakingly pick-hammered textured panels, or pleasing swooping shapes.
Further there is always space for glass, brass, Terrazzo and lighting.
Sam's design does feel cold, unnatural and broken, definitely not what brutalist living is about.
> cold, unnatural and broken, definitely not what brutalist living is about.
This can often be the actual experience of it, though. Part of why it's so divisive. Personally I'm on the "looks great, wouldn't want to actually live there" side.
The Barbican is an example of how good it can be when properly maintained by a community. There are plenty of less prestigious examples where the community cheered their demolition.
isolli 1 hours ago [-]
My subjective appreciation of building materials depends essentially on how gracefully they age. I find that concrete does not age well... and dislike brutalism for this specific reason.
bluGill 57 minutes ago [-]
Most brutalism was never intended to last. It was intended to be a quick/cheap answer to get people acceptable housing in the cities. Then they would build something nicer for people to live in as the economy gets richer. Which is why it so often is associated with decay these days - the structure still stands, but it has outlasted the expected lifespan.
There are burtalism structures that were intended to be beautiful and last. They do that well (well beauty is in the eye of the beholder), but the majority was quick and cheap above all else.
BariumBlue 1 hours ago [-]
Yes I had the same thought.
Imo brutalism is monolithic and unyielding. This is opposite, with the sturdy concrete yielding into plant overgrowth and exposed rebar.
subjectsigma 26 minutes ago [-]
My understanding of brutalism is that it’s an extreme interpretation of “function over form”. The most brutalist laptop stand would be a cardboard box turned upside down, not a slightly impractical block of concrete carefully manufactured to evoke a certain aesthetic.
zer00eyz 23 minutes ago [-]
I love this! The pure weight of it is amazing, and distinctly makes a statement. Its a fun concept one could play with if they were making their own!
I think a "clean" and "contemporary" version of this would look amazing as well:
Is it just me or can you all hear the sound of the metal/aluminum scratching against the concrete?
Loved the brutalist movie, this actually seems quite nice assthetically.
bpavuk 52 minutes ago [-]
try playing Control then! that's your dream come true :) (well, maybe except the Hiss part)
4 hours ago [-]
cm2187 2 hours ago [-]
You just need to cover it with graffitis to fully depict the experience of the poor souls living in brutalist buildings.
xgulfie 1 hours ago [-]
The author mentions urban decay and dilapidation multiple times and very clearly worked that into the design here
einpoklum 49 minutes ago [-]
Such a heavy stand might serve as a nice heat sink too, I would think. Doesn't have fins, but it could radiate evenly, and not even get that hot.
weirdmantis69 1 hours ago [-]
I love concrete as a medium but that's got to be heavy af and I would manage to smack my elbow on it all the time as well as smash my coffee mug on it.
sam-bee 43 minutes ago [-]
Yeah, getting it into the office was non-trivial!
xgulfie 1 hours ago [-]
When I first look at this I think "hey it would be nicer if it wasn't falling apart", but you could argue that's kind of the point. Well done
xpe 3 hours ago [-]
Also known as an inertial mass dampener for your sit-stand desk.
I appreciate++ the design except for the too-perfect rebar and the exposed wire directly _in_ the concrete. Pros would use a conduit methinks.
sam-bee 2 hours ago [-]
The conduit is a good idea. I'm working on a Raspberry Pi stand in leather and walnut right now. Think I'm going to incorporate that somehow
mghackerlady 2 hours ago [-]
I've always loved this style of architecture. People think commie blocks are ugly but I've always appreciated their simple utilitarianism
CSP_LIBRARY 1 hours ago [-]
post-apocalyptic vibes
sam-bee 42 minutes ago [-]
Sure is! It was a lot of fun to make, and I think it ended up with a nice urban decay feel to it
jagged-chisel 1 hours ago [-]
Did they actually show the tools used to remove bubbles?
sam-bee 58 minutes ago [-]
That got cropped out of all photos in the interest of taste and decency.
jagged-chisel 31 minutes ago [-]
A pic of a post-apocalyptic cement vibrator (perhaps not the dildo kind) would definitely have fit the aesthetic
3 hours ago [-]
Rendered at 14:50:27 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
That's debatable, but it's a moot point; it's pastiche, so it doesn't have the same goals or motivations as the original.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastiche
Its quite surreal. Very much in-your-face concrete exposure. Yet, to walk and experience it with your eyes is a study of contrasts: a giant, comparitively modern, greenhouse, has a glass roof open to the sky and yet many floors have no light or windows at all. And in the outdoor spaces, like the fountain/canal running through the complex the concrete will sort of be in the background and lets you focus on everything else: the water, the swans and the people around.
Juxtapose that to low hanging exposed concrete roofs and walls in closed passages could make one feel constrained/claustrophobic/yearning for light.
My favorite map is ‘One Need Not Be a House’ by Robert Yang, which was inspired by Louis Kahn's "brick brutalism" masterpieces in Bangladesh and India, as well as contemporary level design like The Silent Cartographer. The artist writes about their process on their blog post, https://www.blog.radiator.debacle.us/2026/01/one-need-not-be...
The map jam is standalone and uses custom assets so you don’t need a copy of Quake to enjoy it. Check the website for the ‘standalone’ variant.
Sorry for derailing! Cool laptop stand!
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Station_Radisson_Met...
I've been looking and looking, but the best I can find is using a narrow keyboard with a separate number-pad only keyboard on the left. I'm in the US.
(It's better for your right shoulder to keep the mouse closer to your body like in the picture.)
May be worth considering too, especially if you're looking for a good keyboard with eg magnetic switches vs shitty rubberdome
(If I needed a numpad I would have it standing alone.. those are easy to find)
[1] https://www.posturite.co.uk/left-handed-mechanical-keyboard
I am indeed a right-handed user, which is why I want my mouse within reach on the right.
found this one as well, don't know the brand: https://www.bloodyusa.com/product.php?pid=11&id=166
It's not clear what the change is, whether it is curation by hand or some other metrics, but it's a positive change, the old Show HN was getting flooded, as recently discussed. ( Although I can't work out how to find that discussion. )
You need a proper Soviet-esque workstation of a laptop to sit on that concrete block - go get yourself a nice, chunky ThinkPad T530.
Re: decay, I regret not taking more photos of the final days of the RBS "Ziggurat": https://www.edinburghlive.co.uk/news/edinburgh-news/stark-ph... ; at the end it had plants growing from much of the upper levels, making it look extremely Horizon Zero Dawn.
You could likely also pour something like this out of aircrete, which would make it a lot lighter even at the same thickness
But I love the hacker feel of it.
EDIT: https://store.steampowered.com/app/870780/Control_Ultimate_E...
The maze level on the original game has to be an all-time best level design.
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=concrete+vibrator
> For a medium-sized piece like this, a vibrating dildo is actually the best thing to use. Just think of it like any other power tool.For a medium-sized piece like this, a vibrating dildo is actually the best thing to use. Just think of it like any other power tool.
I used work on foundations for warehouses, huge concrete blocks as anchor points and this is exactly how we got the bubbles out, we had a huge metal vibrator they call them high-frequency concrete pokers.
Concrete is simply the mass production medium of the time, many of the patterns and moulds used in Barbican for example feature pretty timber imprints, scalloping patterns, painstakingly pick-hammered textured panels, or pleasing swooping shapes.
Further there is always space for glass, brass, Terrazzo and lighting.
Sam's design does feel cold, unnatural and broken, definitely not what brutalist living is about.
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2016/feb/22...
https://www.structuralrenovations.co.uk/portfolio/barbican-e...
https://www.barbicanliving.co.uk/barbican-story/construction...
This can often be the actual experience of it, though. Part of why it's so divisive. Personally I'm on the "looks great, wouldn't want to actually live there" side.
The Barbican is an example of how good it can be when properly maintained by a community. There are plenty of less prestigious examples where the community cheered their demolition.
There are burtalism structures that were intended to be beautiful and last. They do that well (well beauty is in the eye of the beholder), but the majority was quick and cheap above all else.
Imo brutalism is monolithic and unyielding. This is opposite, with the sturdy concrete yielding into plant overgrowth and exposed rebar.
I think a "clean" and "contemporary" version of this would look amazing as well:
Along the lines of: https://www.modustrialmaker.com/blog/2018/8/14/making-an-imp...
Maybe with: (for weight) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foam_concrete (there are plenty of DIY versions of this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4_GxPHwqkA
Loved the brutalist movie, this actually seems quite nice assthetically.
I appreciate++ the design except for the too-perfect rebar and the exposed wire directly _in_ the concrete. Pros would use a conduit methinks.