's 1791
plan for the federal capital city (
United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1887). , as revised by
Andrew Ellicott in 1792 and legends ,
Northeast,
Southeast, and
Southwest. The axes bounding the
quadrants radiate from the
United States Capitol building. The District of Columbia was created to serve as the permanent national capital in 1790. Within the district, a new capital city was founded in 1791 to the east of an existing settlement at
Georgetown. The original street layout in the new City of Washington was designed by
Pierre (Peter) Charles L'Enfant. As a
planned city, Washington was modeled in the
Baroque style and incorporated avenues radiating out from rectangles, providing room for open space and landscaping. At L'Enfant's request,
Thomas Jefferson provided plans of cities such as
Amsterdam,
Paris,
Frankfurt,
Karlsruhe and
Milan, which he had brought back from Europe in 1788. The twelve radiating avenues, the distribution of the central space (originally L-shaped) and other details were inspired by the Spanish royal city of
Aranjuez, whose urban plans were widely distributed and where the
1779 treaty was signed. His design also envisioned a garden-lined "grand avenue" approximately in length and wide in the area that is now the
National Mall. The City of Washington was bounded to the north by Boundary Street, now
Florida Avenue, at the base of the
escarpment of the
Atlantic Seaboard Fall Line, to the southeast by the
Anacostia River, to the southwest by the
Potomac River and to the west by
Rock Creek. President
Washington dismissed L'Enfant in March 1792 due to L'Enfant's insistence on micromanaging the city's planning, which had resulted in conflicts with the three commissioners appointed by Washington to supervise the capital's construction.
Andrew Ellicott, who had worked with L'Enfant surveying the city, was then commissioned to complete the plans. Though Ellicott made revisions to the original plans, including changes to some street patterns, L'Enfant is still credited with the overall design of the city. The district is divided into four
quadrants of unequal area:
Northwest (NW),
Northeast (NE),
Southeast (SE), and
Southwest (SW). The axes bounding the quadrants radiate from the U.S. Capitol building. All road names include the quadrant abbreviation to indicate their location, and house numbers are assigned based on the approximate number of blocks away from the Capitol. In most of the city, the streets are set out in a grid pattern with east–west streets named with letters (
e.g., C Street SW) and north–south streets with numbers (
e.g., 4th Street NW). Most portions of the north–south axis and the eastern portion of the east–west axis are marked by streets with the common name of Capitol Street: North Capitol Street, South Capitol Street, and East Capitol Street. Since an axis runs down the middle of those streets, the addresses on each side are necessarily in different quadrants. The western portion of the east–west axis runs down the Mall. Two avenues,
Constitution Avenue and
Independence Avenue, line each side of the Mall. Following that same idea, "I" Street is often written as "Eye" Street, to distinguish it from the letter "L" and the numeral "1". Similarly, "Q" Street is often written as "Que", "Cue", or "Queue". Urban legend had said that J Street was omitted deliberately by L'Enfant due to a dispute with
John Jay, the first Chief Justice of the
United States Supreme Court; however, this was later proven to be a myth. There is a street named Jay Street in the NE quadrant (in the
Deanwood neighborhood), but it does not belong to the series of lettered streets. In addition to skipping the letter J, the last three letters of the alphabet, X, Y, and Z are not used as street names in any of the quadrants. The letter B is also skipped. North of
the Mall, B Street was renamed in 1931 to
Constitution Avenue, and south of the Mall, B Street was renamed in 1934 to
Independence Avenue. In the areas north and south of the Mall, the lettered streets begin with the letter C, as the Mall itself fills up the portion of the city that would be A Street. ==Expansion of the street-name system==