Right... people who have Pinterest boards of architectural styles tend to appreciate brutalism much more than your average bear.
By analogy: if you are going to play music loudly for potentially millions of people over the course of decades or centuries, you have a responsibility not to play either pop that's likely to be shortlived or esoteric niche music that many people will not like.
This is the task that architects have with every building they design, yet for some reason[1] decide against building the styles that we empirically know have unbelievable lasting power and extremely broad appeal. So broad and so long lasting, in fact, that we simply call them "classical."
[1] They do this because architects and architect-adjacent people, like those with Pinterest boards, give them awards and clout for their "remarkable" and "boundary-pushing" and "thought-provoking" designs, as if those are desirable traits for music played for millions of people across a hundred years.
By analogy: if you are going to play music loudly for potentially millions of people over the course of decades or centuries, you have a responsibility not to play either pop that's likely to be shortlived or esoteric niche music that many people will not like.
This is the task that architects have with every building they design, yet for some reason[1] decide against building the styles that we empirically know have unbelievable lasting power and extremely broad appeal. So broad and so long lasting, in fact, that we simply call them "classical."
[1] They do this because architects and architect-adjacent people, like those with Pinterest boards, give them awards and clout for their "remarkable" and "boundary-pushing" and "thought-provoking" designs, as if those are desirable traits for music played for millions of people across a hundred years.