Penns Original Plan
Penn's Original Plan refers to the 1682 design for Philadelphia created by William Penn and his surveyor Thomas Holme, establishing the distinctive grid pattern with five public squares that has shaped the city's development for over three centuries. The plan envisioned a "greene Countrie Towne" stretching between the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers, its regular streets and open squares providing a rational alternative to the cramped, fire-prone cities of Europe. Though development initially concentrated along the Delaware rather than spreading evenly across the plan, the grid system that Penn and Holme established continues to organize Philadelphia's Center City, making it one of America's most enduring examples of planned urban design.[1]
Design Principles
[edit | edit source]William Penn's design for Philadelphia drew from both practical and idealistic motivations. Having witnessed the Great Fire of London in 1666, which devastated a densely built city, Penn sought to prevent similar disasters through wide streets and dispersed development. The plan's generous lots—each originally intended to include gardens and orchards—would create space between buildings that would slow fire spread and provide residents with access to nature. This combination of safety concerns and pastoral ideals shaped a city plan quite different from contemporary European cities or even other colonial settlements.[2]
The grid pattern reflected Enlightenment values of rationality and order. Streets running east-west were named for trees—Chestnut, Walnut, Spruce, Pine—while those running north-south received numbers. This systematic nomenclature made navigation straightforward, in contrast to the irregular street names of older cities. The plan's symmetry and regularity expressed Penn's belief that rational design could create orderly society, an idea that would influence American city planning for generations. Philadelphia's grid became the model that cities from Savannah to San Francisco would adapt to their own circumstances.[1]
Five Public Squares
[edit | edit source]The five public squares constitute Penn's plan's most distinctive feature, providing common ground distributed across the city's extent. Centre Square, at the intersection of Broad and Market Streets, occupied the plan's geometric center and was intended for public buildings. The four corner squares—originally called simply Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, and Southwest—provided open space at regular intervals throughout the settled area. These squares fulfilled both practical and symbolic functions, serving as gathering places while demonstrating Penn's commitment to public amenity.[2]
The squares were later renamed for notable figures: Northeast became Franklin Square, Northwest became Logan Square, Southeast became Washington Square, and Southwest became Rittenhouse Square. Centre Square eventually became the site of City Hall, departing from Penn's intention while fulfilling his expectation that the central location would attract public buildings. The four remaining squares survive as parks, their character varying from the formal elegance of Rittenhouse to the family-oriented programming of Franklin Square. These squares continue to provide the public amenity that Penn intended, their presence demonstrating how eighteenth-century planning can serve twenty-first-century needs.[1]
Thomas Holme
[edit | edit source]Thomas Holme, Penn's surveyor general, translated the proprietor's vision into the precise plan that guided Philadelphia's development. Holme arrived in Pennsylvania in 1682 and immediately began surveying both the city site and the rural lands that Penn was distributing to investors. The "Portraiture of the City of Philadelphia," published in 1683, presented the plan to prospective settlers and investors, showing the grid extending from river to river with the five squares positioned symmetrically. This plan served as both design document and marketing material, attracting settlers who appreciated its promise of rational urban order.[2]
Holme's execution of the plan required considerable technical skill, as laying out a precise grid across varied terrain demanded accurate surveying. The streets and lots he established provided the framework within which subsequent development occurred, their positions largely surviving despite three centuries of change. Holme died in Philadelphia in 1695, having established the physical form that would define the city's growth. His contribution, though less celebrated than Penn's, was essential to translating idealistic intentions into practical urban form.[1]
Early Development
[edit | edit source]Philadelphia's actual development departed significantly from Penn's idealized plan during the city's first century. Rather than spreading evenly between the two rivers, settlement concentrated along the Delaware, where the port provided economic activity and connection to the wider world. The area between approximately Fourth Street and the Schuylkill remained largely agricultural well into the nineteenth century, with Centre Square used for various temporary purposes rather than the public buildings Penn envisioned. This concentration reflected economic reality—proximity to the port mattered more than geometric balance.[2]
The plan's influence nevertheless shaped development as growth eventually filled the grid. Streets maintained the positions Holme had surveyed, even when buildings filled lots that Penn had intended for gardens. The squares survived despite development pressure, their protected status reflecting the value that subsequent generations placed on Penn's provisions for public space. The plan thus functioned as a framework that guided growth even when specific intentions were modified, demonstrating how good urban design can accommodate changes that planners cannot anticipate.[1]
Legacy
[edit | edit source]Penn's plan established precedents that influenced American city planning for centuries. The grid pattern, five-square system, and rational street naming all appeared in subsequent city plans, from James Oglethorpe's Savannah to the commissioners' plan for New York City. Philadelphia demonstrated that planned cities could accommodate growth while maintaining order, an important lesson for a nation that would build thousands of new communities. The plan's success encouraged confidence in rational planning that persisted through the City Beautiful movement and into contemporary urban design.[2]
The plan's legacy in Philadelphia itself remains visible in Center City's regular streets and surviving squares. While subsequent eras added diagonal boulevards, transportation infrastructure, and tall buildings that Penn could not have imagined, the underlying grid continues to organize movement and development. The plan's persistence demonstrates both its practical utility and its symbolic importance—Philadelphia's grid represents founding intentions that the city continues to honor through preservation and adaptation.[1]