Lego the white house - 21006 Instruction Manual

Page of 76
Pierr
e L
’Enf
an
t plan of W
ashington, D
.C
. W
ik
im
e
d
ia C
o
m
m
o
n
s
Hoban’s name has been connected with public buildings 
and plantation houses in the Charleston area, most notably 
the historic Charleston County Courthouse and the William 
Seabrook house. Another prominent building in Charleston, 
actually documented as a Hoban design, was a 1,200-seat 
theater on Savage’s Green that no longer survives.
The plan of Washington
In 1791 President George Washington appointed Pierre 
Charles L’Enfant to design the new capital city. L’Enfant’s 
plan was based on a grid, with streets traveling north-
south and east-west. Diagonal avenues, which came to 
be named after the states, crossed the grid, intersecting 
with the grid to form plazas. The overall eff ect aimed to 
establish a city with direction and character.
 
To be connected in a straight line by an avenue 
160 feet wide, L’Enfant selected two high spots – Jenkins Hill 
for the “Congress House” and a second hill a mile and a 
half away for the “President’s Palace”. The avenue, 
though no longer a straight line since an addition
to the Treasury building in 1840 eff ectively blocked it,
became Pennsylvania Avenue.
3
21006_BI.indd   3
7/2/2010   6:46:24 PM