
The story of the NYC Street Grid System
The Story of Manhattan’s Grid
Manhattan’s famous street grid was created to bring order to a rapidly growing island. In 1811, the Commissioners’ Plan laid out numbered streets and avenues that would make the city easier to navigate and expand.
The plan was executed by John Randel Jr., who mapped a landscape that was far from flat or simple. Hills, marshes, and existing roads made the work challenging, but the grid eventually became the defining structure of Manhattan.
What started as a practical planning tool became one of the world’s most recognizable urban patterns. Its clean geometry and lasting influence make it an enduring symbol of New York design. That same sense of order and elegance lives on in Bolinder Stockholm’s Manhattan Square.

Read more: Manhattan Square - The Bolinder Stockholm classic pattern

