Urban planning by axes
Introduction
A hippodamic plan, hippodamic layout or checkerboard layout is the type of urban planning that organizes a city by designing its streets at right angles, creating rectangular blocks. The name Hippodamic comes from the name of the Greek architect Hippodamus of Miletus (in Greek: Hippodamos), considered one of the fathers of urban planning whose organizational plans were characterized by a design of rectilinear streets that intersected at right angles. An urban plan called orthogonal plan,[1] equirectangular, grid or checkerboard, is used. Cities that present this type of urban planning have an urban morphology that is perfectly distinguishable in their road layout.
This type of planning has the advantage that its subdivision is easier due to the regularity of the shape of its blocks. Despite this apparent simplicity, this type of plan has some drawbacks, as it prolongs the length of the journeys. To avoid this, it can be completed with diagonal streets. To increase visibility at narrow street intersections, buildings can be designed with chamfers "Chamfer (architecture)").[2].
There are examples of orthogonal planes in Ancient Egypt, Babylon and America. In Ancient Age, the Hellenistic cities and those that arose from a Roman camp stand out; in the Middle Ages the French bastidas "Bastida (military)") and the new Aragonese cities following the ideas of Eiximenes; in the Modern Age the Spanish colonial city; and in the Contemporary Age the Haussmann Plan in Paris or the
Spanish urban expansions.
Orthogonal planes before Hippodamus
This type of urban plan, of ancient origin, was long attributed to Hippodamus of Miletus, but research on Ancient Egypt and Babylon shows orthogonal urban layouts prior to the time of Hippodamus. These cultures exerted great influence on Greece. The first Egyptian cities emerged in the 3rd millennium BC. C. they had orthogonal layouts. According to Charles Picard") "...the sovereign merit of Greece is not so much that it is a homeland of new ideas but of perfect techniques." Babylon radiated its prestige and culture to the entire ancient world. The urban systems that originated in Assyria spread to Etruria and Greece, highlighting the influence of Assyrian cities in the practical element and monumental Egyptian urbanism.