Gotham
Gardens of Eden: Long Island’s Early Twentieth-Century Planned Communities
Reviewed by Tim Keogh
Read MoreSanitizing Playland: Establishing Expectations for Public Behavior in Greater New York’s Parks
By Kara Murphy Schlichting
Read MoreRebecca Solnit and Joshua Jelly-Schapiro's Nonstop Metropolis: A New York City Atlas
Reviewed by Maeve Montalvo
Read MoreMyth # 4: The Grid Plan Created Manhattan’s Small Lots
By Jason M. Barr with Gerard Koeppel
In 1894, noted architect Ernest Flagg voiced a popular belief about Manhattan’s lot sizes: “The greatest evil which ever befell New York City was the division of the blocks into lots of 25 x 100 feet... for from this division has arisen the New York system of tenement-houses, the worse curse which ever afflicted any great community.”
Flagg was lamenting that builders chose not to erect housing on larger lots, which, he argued, would have alleviated over-crowding and disease. While he was not commenting on the grid plan per se, it is easy to see how people have come to confuse Manhattan’s small lots as emanating from the plan itself. Flagg’s strong implication was that there was a direct attempt by city leaders to divide lots into regular configurations. Today the common perception remains that the small lots were a result of the plan. But, in fact, the grid had nothing to do with it.