Monday, 1 April 2013

Urban Policies in Spanish America


Despite centuries of conquestial inclination to order and partition newly occupied territory, the urban phenomenon of orthogonal grid planning was not theoretically confirmed until the sixteenth century, when the Spanish Crown developed a complex set of “Settlement Ordinances,” relating to how to found and build colonial cities. Decreed in 1573, these laws formed part of a larger body of legislative policies known as the Laws of the Indies, issued to regulate social, political and economic life within Spanish imperial possessions. 

Detailed instructions catered to each facet of community creation; city locations were to be selected based maximum potential for land utilization, city-scapes were to be organized according to a strict physical, spiritual and social order, and natives were to be dealt with according to “pacification” techniques. The "Settlement Ordinances" were based on the culmination of successful settlement strategies, and essentially formulated practical ways in which to establish efficient, prosperous and obedient colonial cities. 

The specific criteria outlined by the Spanish makes it possible to visualize this potential ideality of Spanish urban form: newly founded cities would be established on elevated, fertile land, navigable by both land and sea; special attention would paid to the influence of urban design, with the Ordinances decreeing use of a cord and ruler to divide the plan into squares of specific proportions; plazas were to be at the center of the town, oriented to accommodate social and cultural practices; while churches would be distributed evenly, with the main temple in isolation to give it authority.

The urban development techniques outlined within the Laws of the Indies construct a colonial city based on practical strategy, organized in a way that would spatially reiterate an imperial sense of order.   





WORKS CITED:
Gasparini, Graziano. The Spanish American Grid-Plan: The Urban Bureaucratic Form

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