← Art
58.2 GW
Total generation
70%
Renewable share
85.6 €/MWh
DA price
203
gCO₂/kWh
6.1°C
Temperature
6 km/h
Wind speed
Generated prompt (deterministic from data)
A towering brutalist monolith, approximately 14 meters tall with substantial rectangular footprint. The monument is composed of stacked horizontal bands: a medium horizontal band of raw brushed steel with rivets, a medium horizontal band of dark oxidized steel with a blue-green patina, a very wide, dominant horizontal band of translucent glass crystal with internal light refraction, a medium horizontal band of wood-grain imprinted concrete, a thin horizontal band of blue-veined polished marble, a medium horizontal band of polished obsidian-dark stone, a medium horizontal band of rough-hewn black basalt, a medium horizontal band of stained and crumbling dark concrete with rust streaks. Surface: clean concrete with minor weathering, edges still precise. The monument stands proudly vertical, even leaning slightly forward as if projecting outward.. Set in a Raw early spring landscape, muddy ground with first green emerging. Ground: fractured and uneven ground with deep cracks, chunks of displaced concrete. Lighting: harsh sodium-orange floodlight illumination, industrial and intense. Harsh midday overhead light, minimal shadows, maximum exposure. Sky: complete thick grey overcast, the sky pressing down like a concrete ceiling. A faint industrial haze hangs near the ground. Bare cold concrete plaza, no vegetation, bleak and austere. Completely still air, no movement. No distinct shadows, flat diffuse light. Distant industrial cranes and scaffolding visible on the horizon. A construction site atmosphere. Two tiny human figures stand at the base for scale, dwarfed by the structure. Photorealistic architectural photography, Tadao Ando brutalist aesthetic, volumetric atmospheric lighting, cinematic composition, extreme detail on concrete textures and material surfaces. Shot on medium format camera. The monument feels ancient and permanent, a ruin from a civilization that worshipped electricity.