1960s Dutch Brutalist Concrete Windows — Architectural Art Salvage
Sent from Nederland
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Designer Unknown
Netherlands 1960s
H 205cm W 195cm
Introduce a striking piece of mid-century European design into your space with this pair of original brutalist concrete window panels, salvaged from a 1960s villa in the Netherlands. Designed as two separate units divided by a section of wall, the panels were created to form one continuous visual composition—their sculptural shapes, negative spaces, and glass inlays aligning into a single unified artwork when placed side by side. These rare architectural elements blur the line between sculpture, lightwork, and functional construction.
Hand-cast in concrete and embedded with richly colored glass fragments, each panel forms an abstract mosaic of geometric voids and textured glass blocks. When backlit, the windows come alive—warm amber, red, and smoked-gray tones glow through the concrete apertures, transforming the panels into atmospheric light sculptures. Suitable as art pieces, architectural partitions, garden features, wall installations, or statement lighting
These pieces retain their original patina, with subtle weathering, mineral tones, and surface texture that speak to their age and authenticity. Glass elements are securely set, and the concrete structure is solid throughout.
Architectural salvage of this quality—and in this style—is increasingly rare. These windows embody the raw geometry and material honesty that define brutalist design.