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industrial-brutalist-ui

Use when creating raw industrial or tactical telemetry UIs with rigid grids, stark typography, CRT effects, and high-density data.

Documentation

SKILL: Industrial Brutalism & Tactical Telemetry UI

When to Use

  • Use when the user wants a brutalist, industrial, Swiss-print, CRT terminal, or tactical telemetry interface.
  • Use when building data-heavy dashboards, portfolios, editorial pages, or command-center UIs that should feel raw and mechanical.
  • Use when a design must reject soft gradients, rounded consumer UI, glassmorphism, and generic SaaS card layouts.

Limitations

  • This style is intentionally severe and may not fit consumer products, accessibility-sensitive flows, or brands that require warmth and softness.
  • CRT, halftone, dithering, and degradation effects must be tested for readability, contrast, and motion sensitivity.
  • Do not mix the light industrial and dark telemetry palettes in the same interface unless the user explicitly asks for a controlled hybrid.

1. Skill Meta

Name: Industrial Brutalism & Tactical Telemetry Interface Engineering Description: Advanced proficiency in architecting web interfaces that synthesize mid-century Swiss Typographic design, industrial manufacturing manuals, and retro-futuristic aerospace/military terminal interfaces. This discipline requires absolute mastery over rigid modular grids, extreme typographic scale contrast, purely utilitarian color palettes, and the programmatic simulation of analog degradation (halftones, CRT scanlines, bitmap dithering). The objective is to construct digital environments that project raw functionality, mechanical precision, and high data density, deliberately discarding conventional consumer UI patterns.

2. Visual Archetypes

The design system operates by merging two distinct but highly compatible visual paradigms. Pick ONE per project and commit to it. Do not alternate or mix both modes within the same interface.

2.1 Swiss Industrial Print

Derived from 1960s corporate identity systems and heavy machinery blueprints.

  • Characteristics: High-contrast light modes (newsprint/off-white substrates). Reliance on monolithic, heavy sans-serif typography. Unforgiving structural grids outlined by visible dividing lines. Aggressive, asymmetric use of negative space punctuated by oversized, viewport-bleeding numerals or letterforms. Heavy use of primary red as an alert/accent color.

2.2 Tactical Telemetry & CRT Terminal

Derived from classified military databases, legacy mainframes, and aerospace Heads-Up Displays (HUDs).

  • Characteristics: Dark mode exclusivity. High-density tabular data presentation. Absolute dominance of monospaced typography. Integration of technical framing devices (ASCII brackets, crosshairs). Application of simulated hardware limitations (phosphor glow, scanlines, low bit-depth rendering).

3. Typographic Architecture

Typography is the primary structural and decorative infrastructure. Imagery is secondary. The system demands extreme variance in scale, weight, and spacing.

3.1 Macro-Typography (Structural Headers)

  • Classification: Neo-Grotesque / Heavy Sans-Serif.
  • Optimal Web Fonts: Neue Haas Grotesk (Black), Inter (Extra Bold/Black), Archivo Black, Roboto Flex (Heavy), Monument Extended.
  • Implementation Parameters:
    • Scale: Deployed at massive scales using fluid typography (e.g., clamp(4rem, 10vw, 15rem)).
    • Tracking (Letter-spacing): Extremely tight, often negative (-0.03em to -0.06em), forcing glyphs to form solid architectural blocks.
    • Leading (Line-height): Highly compressed (0.85 to 0.95).
    • Casing: Exclusively uppercase for structural impact.

3.2 Micro-Typography (Data & Telemetry)

  • Classification: Monospace / Technical Sans.
  • Optimal Web Fonts: JetBrains Mono, IBM Plex Mono, Space Mono, VT323, Courier Prime.
  • Implementation Parameters:
    • Scale: Fixed and small (10px to 14px / 0.7rem to 0.875rem).
    • Tracking: Generous (0.05em to 0.1em) to simulate mechanical typewriter spacing or terminal matrices.
    • Leading: Standard to tight (1.2 to 1.4).
    • Casing: Exclusively uppercase. Used for all metadata, navigation, unit IDs, and coordinates.

3.3 Textural Contrast (Artistic Disruption)

  • Classification: High-Contrast Serif.
  • Optimal Web Fonts: Playfair Display, EB Garamond, Times New Roman.
  • Implementation Parameters: Used exceedingly sparingly. Must be subjected to heavy post-processing (halftone filters, 1-bit dithering) to degrade vector perfection and create textural juxtaposition against the clean sans-serifs.

4. Color System

The color architecture is uncompromising. Gradients, soft drop shadows, and modern translucency are strictly prohibited. Colors simulate physical media or primitive emissive displays.

CRITICAL: Choose ONE substrate palette per project and use it consistently. Never mix light and dark substrates within the same interface.

If Swiss Industrial Print (Light):

  • Background: #F4F4F0 or `

Use Cases

  • Use when the user wants a brutalist, industrial, Swiss-print, CRT terminal, or tactical telemetry interface.
  • Use when building data-heavy dashboards, portfolios, editorial pages, or command-center UIs that should feel raw and mechanical.
  • Use when a design must reject soft gradients, rounded consumer UI, glassmorphism, and generic SaaS card layouts.