From Spanish Presidio to the American Grid: The Hispanic Roots of San Diego’s Urban Core

From Spanish Presidio to the American Grid: The Hispanic Roots of San Diego’s Urban Core
San Diego, California. Photo by Samuel Ramos on Unsplash San Diego, California. Photo by Samuel Ramos on Unsplash

Very close to the Mexican border, in the southwest corner of the United States, lies the city of San Diego. Its urban history began in 1769 with the arrival of a Spanish military expedition commanded by Gaspar de Portola, which marked the first permanent settlement in the territory that was known as Alta California. However, unlike the more formally urbanized administrative capitals and towns of Mexico and Central America, San Diego was conceived as a frontier outpost. Today, it has become the second-largest city in California, just after Los Angeles, and its urban grid tells a story about the Hispanic heritage that is intertwined with the contemporary cultural environment of the United States.

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