Chelmsford Public Library

City on a grid, how New York became New York, Gerard Koeppel

Label
City on a grid, how New York became New York, Gerard Koeppel
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-275) and index
Illustrations
platesillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
City on a grid
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
902657028
Responsibility statement
Gerard Koeppel
Sub title
how New York became New York
Summary
"City on a Grid tells--for the first time--the fascinating story of the creation and long life of New York City's distinctive street grid: its many streets crossed at right angles by a few parallel avenues laid upon a rural Manhattan two centuries ago. The grid made New York what it is today, and defined the urbanism of a rising nation. When it was first conceived at the start of the nineteenth century, the grid was intended to bring order to the chaos of 'Old New York'--the quaint, low-scale, but notoriously dirty and disorderly place of jumbled colonial streets that had sprouted from the southern tip of the island from its earliest days. Turning the swamps and hills of Manhattan into the city we know today was a project on the scale of building the Erie or Panama Canals or the Transcontinental Railway. Like those epics, it is a story filled with larger-than-life characters. And the hundreds of rectangular lots and buildings the grid inevitably produced gave a sense of stability and rational purpose for a young city evolving into greatness. Now, then, is the time to tell the grid's story: the events that led to it, how the commissioners and their surveyor came up with their plan, and how the lengthening life of the city has been utterly shaped by it. Whether one loves or hates New York's grid, little has been written to explain how it came to be, who did it and why, and what it has meant for New York and the cities and nation that have looked to New York as the model for American urban life. Until now"--, Provided by publisher
Classification
Content
Mapped to