People and Place

website-hit-counters.com
Provided by website-hit-counters.com site.
proofmathisbeautiful:

heathernicolezilla:

200th Birthday for the Map that Made New York City!! 
I loveeee this!! :)
(NYTimes) - Henry James condemned it a century ago as a “primal topographic curse.” Rem Koolhaas,  the architect and urbanist, countered that its two-dimensional form  created “undreamed-of freedom for three-dimensional anarchy.” More  recently, two historians described its map, regardless of its flaws, as  “the single most important document in New York City’s development.”
Two hundred years ago on Tuesday, the city’s street commissioners  certified the no-frills street matrix that heralded New York’s  transformation into the City of Angles — the rigid 90-degree grid that  spurred unprecedented development, gave birth to vehicular gridlock and  defiant jaywalking, and spawned a new breed of entrepreneurs who would  exponentially raise the value of Manhattan’s real estate.
Today, debate endures about the grid, which mapped out 11 major avenues  and 155 crosstown streets along which modern Manhattan would rise.
The grid was the great leveler. By shifting millions of cubic yards of  earth and rock, it carved out modest but equal flat lots (mostly 25 by  100 feet) available for purchase. And if it fostered what de Tocqueville  viewed as relentless monotony, its coordinates also enabled drivers and  pedestrians to figure out where they stood, physically and  metaphorically.
“This is the purpose of New York’s geometry,” wrote Roland Barthes, the  20th-century French philosopher. “That each individual should be  poetically the owner of the capital of the world.”

Not completely math…
…but it’s super interesting!
And I love NYC! :)

proofmathisbeautiful:

heathernicolezilla:

200th Birthday for the Map that Made New York City!!

I loveeee this!! :)

(NYTimes) - Henry James condemned it a century ago as a “primal topographic curse.” Rem Koolhaas, the architect and urbanist, countered that its two-dimensional form created “undreamed-of freedom for three-dimensional anarchy.” More recently, two historians described its map, regardless of its flaws, as “the single most important document in New York City’s development.”

Two hundred years ago on Tuesday, the city’s street commissioners certified the no-frills street matrix that heralded New York’s transformation into the City of Angles — the rigid 90-degree grid that spurred unprecedented development, gave birth to vehicular gridlock and defiant jaywalking, and spawned a new breed of entrepreneurs who would exponentially raise the value of Manhattan’s real estate.

Today, debate endures about the grid, which mapped out 11 major avenues and 155 crosstown streets along which modern Manhattan would rise.

The grid was the great leveler. By shifting millions of cubic yards of earth and rock, it carved out modest but equal flat lots (mostly 25 by 100 feet) available for purchase. And if it fostered what de Tocqueville viewed as relentless monotony, its coordinates also enabled drivers and pedestrians to figure out where they stood, physically and metaphorically.

“This is the purpose of New York’s geometry,” wrote Roland Barthes, the 20th-century French philosopher. “That each individual should be poetically the owner of the capital of the world.”

Not completely math…

…but it’s super interesting!

And I love NYC! :)