At this point we should step back a moment and look at how towns and
cities were planned and laid out in the colonial period of the Southwest and Mexico.
We need to have an understanding of Spanish town planning because the basic precepts
as practiced in colonial times influenced the collective architecture of houses,
institutional structures, such as government buildings and churches, as well as
public spaces. These in turn formed the very specific streetscape that defines
Latin American urbanism.
 [31K] |
|
 [16K] |
Plaza in Oaxaca, Mexico |
|
Street in Alamos, Mexico |
Immediately after the conquest of Mexico by the Spanish, the
victorious soldiers (conquistadores), settlers and missionaries were all
building in a haphazard and piecemeal fashion. Therefore, an early Viceroy,
Antonio de Mendoza, issued a policy that insisted on a standardized design
for the major building types such as government buildings, churches and
monasteries. This was known as the principle of "moderate design"
("traza moderada"). Not too long after, in 1573 the King of Spain,
Philip II, decreed a more extensive set of rules for the building of
towns and cities in the Americas. These ordinances are known as
"The Law of the Indies." While these rules applied to many facets of
colonial life such as administering the native population as well as
legal and fiduciary regulations, their main legacy has been the form of
Latin American cities. The Law of the Indies decreed, among other things,
that all new towns must have a central plaza surrounded by important
buildings with portales or arcades, and from which the principal streets,
laid out in a grid pattern, shall begin. Smaller secondary plazas were also
called for as well as narrow streets, in hot climates, in order to provide
shade. New towns reflecting these principles were built all through the Americas.
[60K] |
Aerial view of Antigua, Guatemala, showing the regular grid partern of streets and plazas |
Suggested reading:
University of Miami School of Architecture. The New City, volume I, University of Miami School of Architecture: Princeton Architectural Press, © 1991
Now, what does all this have to do with Southwest architecture?
The answer is that many urban settlements including Santa Fe, New Mexico
(1610) and Alamos, Mexico, almost 140 years later (1748) were laid out with
regards to the Law of the Indies. True, due to the great distance from the
center of governmental power in Mexico City, and the independent nature of
earlier settlers on the frontier, the builders of these towns did not
totally adhere to the Law of the Indies, but they often followed the basic
precepts of a central plaza surrounded by important buildings with arcades,
and a grid of narrow streets radiating from this core.
Map drawings courtesy of Nina Veregge, Architect
 [28K] |
|
 [26K] |
Plan of central Santa Fe showing the plaza |
|
Plan of the core of 18th century Alamos, Mexico |
Both Albuquerque, New Mexico and Tucson, Arizona originally were
laid out with plazas. The citizens of Albuquerque still have theirs, but
Tucson lost its Plaza La Mesilla in 1969 when it was destroyed in order to
realign Broadway Blvd. Tucson's original Cathedral, San Agustín, was sited
on the east side of this important public space.
Plazas and surrounding arcades greatly contribute to making cities dynamic and people friendly. When
cities such as Tucson gave up these public spaces to the automobile, they
abdicated the hearts of their downtown to lifeless expediency.
Map drawings courtesy of Nina Veregge, Architect
 [23K] |
|
 [38K] |
Map of Albuquerque, 1898 |
|
Map of Tucson, 1901 |
Suggested reading:
Veregge, Nina. "Transformations of Spanish Urban Landscapes in the American Southwest, 1821 - 1900,"
Journal of the Southwest, Winter 1993.
Fortunately, and thanks to the vision of a Tucson couple,
Jean-Paul Bierny and Chris Tanz, with support from the University of Arizona's
Southwest Studies Center and the City of Tucson, there is a proposal in place
to build a new plaza on what is currently an asphalt-surfaced parking lot
across from the existing San Agustín Cathedral. If this proposal is implemented,
Tucson would have a second chance to possess a wonderful public space near its
downtown core similar to cities like Santa Fe and Albuquerque, not to mention
the hundreds of plazas in Latin America.
Drawing by Bob Vint Associates Architects, courtesy of the Southwest Studies Center
 [49K]
Plaza San Augustín |