The late 19th century
urban planner Ildefons Cerdà included it as an essential part of his draft of the new "Projecte de reforma i eixample de Barcelona" (nowadays simply known as "Pla Cerdà"), as a wide road linking a number of villages around the coastal part of Barcelona, and called it
Lletra N, Número 11. It was renamed
Corts in 1900, as a reference to the
Medieval and
Early Modern Catalan Courts. Later on, after the
Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed in 1931, it was again renamed as
Corts Catalanes. With the Francoist victory after the
Civil War, its name was changed to
Avenida de José Antonio Primo de Rivera in 1939. With the restoration of democracy, its name became
Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes in 1979. ==Transportation==