Strange Maps

December 29, 2006

55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @

Most people know that Batman lives in Gotham City, and that this fictional place is a barely disguised version of New York City – so much so that in real life, NYC is sometimes nicknamed Gotham. Here’s a few lesser known facts about Batman’s home town:

  • The place-name ‘Gotham’ has an interesting pedigree. It was used as early as the 15th century to refer to places with foolish inhabitants – a direct reference to the eponymous town in Nottinghamshire, England.

  • Washington Irving, author of ‘Sleepy Hollow’ fame, used it as a sobriquet for New York for the first time in his satire Salmagundi (1807).

  • Prior to 1941, Batman’s home (in the DC Comics) was New York City; he didn’t move to Gotham until DC Comics #48 (in February 1941).

  • Gotham is modeled after NYC in architecture and atmosphere – although the dark, brooding aspects of New York are emphasized and exaggerated. It is said to resemble “Manhattan below 14th Street at 11 minutes past midnight on the coldest night in November”, although in the comics, Gotham and NYC do exist separately from each other.
  • Alan Moore and others have produced an elaborate back story for Gotham. It was founded by a Swedish mercenary in 1635, later taken over by the British and the site of a major battle during the Revolutionary War. Rumor has it Gotham is home to many occult beings and sects.

  • In the pre-Civil War era, Judge Solomon Wayne – an ancestor of Bruce Wayne – commissioned many buildings in the Gothic Revival style, the dominant architectural style of the city.

  • Being a fictional place, written about by a plethora of different writers, it’s perhaps inevitable that there’s confusion about its precise location (and subdivision). The city has been situated at the shores of ‘Lake Gotham’ but is more usually placed somewhere on the Eastern Seaboard of the US – in varying degrees of proximity to Metropolis, Superman’s home town.

  • Several actual maps of Gotham exist, some based on Manhattan, Vancouver or the Rhode Island shoreline. This map of Gotham City was produced by Eliot R. Brown for Gotham City Secret File and Origins #1. It’s considered quite ‘definitive’, and is taken from the No Man’s Land story arc.

gothammap.jpg 

Here is some more information on some of the landmarks mentioned in this map: 

1) Crime Alley:  formally Park Row, this small side street in the East End is a dangerous, crime-infested area. Joe Chill killed Bruce Wayne’s parents here in front of his very eyes. Bruce Wayne used his influence to keep the street preserved during the rebuilding of Gotham, making it the only part of the present-day Gotham City to remain.

2) Arkham Asylum: named in homage to H.P. Lovecraft’s horror stories, many of Batman’s foes are locked up here.

3) Wayne Manor: also called Wayne Mansion, this is the estate of Bruce Wayne and the location of the Batcave.

5) Brentwood Academy: a private high school once attended by Tim Drake, the third Robin.

7) Old Gotham: the Gotham district more well-known for the location of Oracle’s Clock Tower and the GCPD headquarters.

8 ) Robert Kane Memorial Bridge: named for Batman co-creator Bob Kane.

9) Amusement Mile: an amusement park in Gotham, lined with ferriswheels, rollercoasters, and other attractions typical of a theme park.

11) Robbinsville: named for artist Frank Robbins.

12) Cape Carmine: named for artist Carmine Infantino.

13) Sprang Bridge: named for artist Dick Sprang.

14) Sprang River: also named for artist Dick Sprang.

16) Aparo Park: named for artist Jim Aparo.

25) Archie Goodwin International Airport: named for writer and editor Archie Goodwin.

27) Dixon Dock: named for writer Chuck Dixon.

29) Tricorner Yards: located on an island at the southwest corner of Gotham City.

30) Robinson Park: The city’s main park. During “No Man’s Land,” Poison Ivy claimed this area as her own. Named for 1940s Batman artist and Joker co-creator Jerry Robinson.

33) Finger River: Named for Batman co-creator Bill Finger.

3 8) The Clocktower: A tower in central Gotham which at one time contained the secret headquarters of Barbara Gordon, for her activities as Oracle. The “War Games” storyline shows the destruction of the Clocktower.

39) Wayne Tower: this is the headquarters of Wayne Enterprises, located at the corner of Finger and Broome Streets. Named for comic creators Bill Finger and John Broome.

41) Blackgate Isle: Location of Blackgate Maximum Security Penitentiary, the city’s main prison.

43) Grant Park: named for writer Alan Grant.

47) Aparo Expressway: Named for artist Jim Aparo.

53) R.H. Kane Building: named for Batman co-creator Bob Kane.

55 Comments »

  1. [...] Although I’ve seen this map of DC’s Gotham City before — I don’t remember where — today it pops up on the quirky Strange Maps blog, complete with some “lesser-known facts” about Batman’s stomping grounds. A sampling: [...]

    Pingback by Blog@Newsarama » Gotham City on a dollar a day — December 29, 2006 @

  2. The island and central park look a good bit like New York, though the sheer number of islands remind mea bit more of Montreal. The street grid even varies in texture. Maybe a touch of Boston with the rivers/straits running through the middle.

    What’s striking, though, is the ring road, an interstate highway circling the island. That, and the way the major bridges feed the highway. There aren’t really any major surface streets here. The place is built like a 1950s city planner’s dream - denser than most suburbs, perhaps, but sharing the same need for speed. Even the power plant’s pushed way out beyond the river.

    Comment by David Ramos — December 29, 2006 @

  3. [...] - A tourist map of Gotham, including Blackgate Isle, Amusement Mile and Crime Alley (Thanks to kottke.org) [...]

    Pingback by Muckraked » Blog Archive » The News Sieve — December 29, 2006 @

  4. [...] NYC claims 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps [...]

    Pingback by (This Might Interest) Maybe just me » Blog Archive » NYC claims — December 29, 2006 @

  5. Cool article. One quibble: If “hometown” means the place you grew up (not the place you happen to live), Superman’s hometown is Smallville, not Metropolis.

    Comment by Pete — December 29, 2006 @

  6. [...] http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2006/12/29/55-a-tourist-map-of-gotham/ Posted in Uncategorized by rossscott RSS 2.0 *Name [...]

    Pingback by Beanspill Media » Blog Archive » Map of Gotham City — December 29, 2006 @

  7. Another teensy quibble: I think you mean “Detective Comics #48″. The fact that it’s still “DC (Detective Comics) Comics’ Detective Comics #48″ doesn’t help the matter, but you see what I mean. =-)

    Comment by Jemaleddin — December 29, 2006 @

  8. I like your blog. It’s a good read with a lot of interesting things.

    Comment by shelbycockrell — December 29, 2006 @

  9. Happy New Year from Sweden. :-)

    Comment by ebitmanagement — December 29, 2006 @

  10. Interesting that Mr. Ramos should compare this particular map of Gotham to Montreal.

    Two reasons: partly because the comparison works rather well, especially if you assume that every single island in Gotham City/Kane County proper is fully developed, and so might serve as a vision of a possible end-game scenario for the Montreal region’s future.
    And partly because I remember that the Mayfair Games edition role-playing game based on the DC comics characters and shared universe — the same one that based their version of Gotham’s map on Rhode Island 20+ years ago — based its own version of the Metropolis map on that of Montreal.

    Comment by Dwight Williams — December 29, 2006 @

  11. This is stupid

    Comment by MAx — December 29, 2006 @

  12. Cool.

    Comment by Michael — December 29, 2006 @

  13. [...] Tourist Map of Gotham December 29, 2006 Posted by Michael in Crime. trackback A useful resource for white hot crimefighting thugs is availablehere. [...]

    Pingback by A Tourist Map of Gotham « Innocent Bystanders — December 30, 2006 @

  14. In College circa 1988, I was with a group of guys who called up the DC offices to get clarification on Gotham / New York / Metropolis.

    The guy we spoke to said Gotham is New York at night; Metropolis is New York by day.

    Then he told us to get lives.

    Comment by purpleslog — December 30, 2006 @

  15. That’s really fascinating. Thanks for the info.

    Comment by Mary — December 30, 2006 @

  16. [...] 55 – A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps As a fan of Batman, I find this to be very fun. (tags: via:kottke comics maps) [...]

    Pingback by ArtLung Blog : Archives : » Daily Links — December 30, 2006 @

  17. Cool! :)

    Though that DC Comics man seems to have a point: have you noticed how Superman almost never fights crime in Metropolis by night? (Perhaps his powers are at an ebb when he’s not exposed to sunlight??)

    Comment by A.R.Yngve — December 30, 2006 @

  18. some nice informations here!

    Comment by manipulacoes — December 30, 2006 @

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    Comment by gabe — December 30, 2006 @

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    n your site and i will put a link of your on my site ,I am looking to get a Government Investigation in to the Court. keep look at my blog ,and you will see there is someing Roung in Canada

    Comment by Richard Harris — December 30, 2006 @

  21. Great post!

    http://www.bookmans.us/forums/showthread.php?p=3154#post3154

    Comment by Scott — January 2, 2007 @

  22. Is it me or is 55 supposed to be one of the two 54 circles.

    Comment by Ra — January 3, 2007 @

  23. [...] σε πολλους.Το site strangemaps αναλαμβάνει να [...]

    Pingback by Ο χάρτης της Gotham City at Wiggler — January 3, 2007 @

  24. [...] Some facts about Gotham City. via Kottke [...]

    Pingback by Let's Not Think This Through » Blog Archive » Regarding Gotham City — January 3, 2007 @

  25. [...] busy busy at the moment but just enough time to spot this rather nice tourist map of Gotham City. Click here to see it in all its [...]

    Pingback by Novemberfive » Gotham City — January 4, 2007 @

  26. [...] Click here to check it out. No Comments so far Leave a comment RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI Leave a comment Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> [...]

    Pingback by Comics Crew — January 4, 2007 @

  27. [...] Para más completa y detallada información, se puede recurrir a las Oficinas de Turismo de Gotham City o en este enlace [...]

    Pingback by Entrecomics » Blog Archive » Mapa turístico de Gotham City — January 5, 2007 @

  28. [...] A tourist map of Gotham [...]

    Pingback by Happy New Links « Torque Control — January 6, 2007 @

  29. [...] strangemaps [...]

    Pingback by Admit One / mental gymnasium » A Tourist Map of Gotham — January 8, 2007 @

  30. [...] 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps (tags: maps nyc literature) [...]

    Pingback by links for 2007-01-08 « Amy G. Dala — January 8, 2007 @

  31. this is just about the coolest frickin thing Ive seen in all my days

    Comment by Zack Gonzales — January 9, 2007 @

  32. [...] 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps A detailed description of a map of Gotham City. Could be an interesting basis for a rendering project. (tags: batman comics map gotham) [...]

    Pingback by Matt Nelsen :: links for 2007-01-09 — January 9, 2007 @

  33. [...] 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps Most people know that Batman lives in Gotham City, and that this fictional place is a barely disguised version of New York City – so much so that in real life, NYC is sometimes nicknamed Gotham. Here’s a few lesser known facts about Batman’s home to (tags: literature Mapping maps nyc city gotham batman new york tourist tourism) [...]

    Pingback by /x/y/z/ » Blog Archive » links for 2007-01-09 — January 11, 2007 @

  34. Yep. One of those “54″(Suhr Complex) markers is actually supposed to be the site of either item “52″, Von Grunwald Tower or “56″, the Kubrick District.

    Comment by Dwight Williams — January 22, 2007 @

  35. 高譚市(Gotham City)觀光地圖

    大家都知道蝙蝠俠混哪裡的,不過那個地方居然也有觀光地圖,真是不可思議!

    原圖與導覽詳見:http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/

    Trackback by 科幻國協在臺辦事處 The Sf Commonwealth Office in Taiwan — January 26, 2007 @

  36. [...] A tourist map of Gotham City. Gotham resembles “Manhattan below 14th Street at 11 minutes past midnight on the coldest night in November”. [...]

    Pingback by A tourist map of Gotham City — January 29, 2007 @

  37. Love your blog. First time I’ve seen such a detail map of Gotham City

    Comment by comics — February 1, 2007 @

  38. It is not the case that New York acquired the nickname “Gotham” because of its use in the Batman comics. The name Gotham has been associated with the city of New York since the beginning of the 19th century at least (Washington Irving used it.)

    However, it is probably true that had Batman not hailed from “Gotham City” few people today would have ever heard the name.

    Lucius Alexander

    Palindromedary Enterprises

    Comment by Lucius Alexander — February 3, 2007 @

  39. [...] 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham « strange maps Said it before, say it again — Me=Geek. (tags: maps comics blog batman) Posted by John Carr Filed in del.icio.us [...]

    Pingback by links for 2007-02-13 « NONE OF THIS MATTERS — February 13, 2007 @

  40. [...] exist, some based on Manhattan, Vancouver or the Rhode Island shoreline. This map of Gotham City [enlarge] was produced by Eliot R. Brown for Gotham City Secret File and Origins #1. It’s considered quite [...]

    Pingback by the new shelton wet/dry — February 18, 2007 @

  41. One of the Batman movies (Batman Forever, I think) has the Statue of Liberty in Gotham, which is pretty off-putting.

    Comment by Some Guy — February 28, 2007 @

  42. I’m not a comic book or superhero person so I’m no expert but I did read whatever I found as a kid and I remember an old Justice League compendium (oversize, probably mid 1970s) that included an overview panel of the East Coast including Gotham and Metropolis as well as Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, Providence, and Boston. Metropolis, I think, was on the southwest coast of New Jersey on the Delaware. Or that was Gotham. Either way I don’t remember where the other was. Book long lost.

    Comment by Didymus — March 2, 2007 @

  43. Here’s an Atlas of the DC Universe that puts Metropolis and Gotham on opposite sides of the Delaware River, with Metropolis in the approximate location of Lewes, Delaware (a beach resort town where my parents used to hang out a lot). I think the source is Mayfair Games.

    Metropolis seems to move around more than Gotham does; Gotham’s always been an East Coast city but a lot of people seem to think of Metropolis as a Midwestern city, analogous to Chicago, Cleveland or St. Louis, possibly in the same general region of the country as Smallville.

    Comment by Matt McIrvin — March 4, 2007 @

  44. If I recall correctly, the justification for the latter claim is that Siegel and Schuster were from the Midwest, and might have been thinking more in terms of nearby, familiar cities rather than the absolute biggest. Since then, the cultural poles have finished moving out to the coasts…

    Comment by StClair — March 5, 2007 @

  45. hi m25

    Comment by mahmuod — March 31, 2007 @

  46. [...] Frank wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptMost people know that Batman lives in Gotham City, and that this fictional place is a barely disguised version of New York City – so much so that in real life, NYC is sometimes nicknamed Gotham. Here’sa few lesser known facts about … [...]

    Pingback by attractions » 55 - A Tourist Map of Gotham — April 6, 2007 @

  47. This is an interesting blog!

    Comment by all2you — April 19, 2007 @

  48. [...] Map of Gotham Vía: La cueva 0 Comentarios  —  [...]

    Pingback by Webmaniacos | El mejor humor, curiosidades, bromas e imágenes divertidas de Internet » El mapa de Gotham — May 11, 2007 @

  49. Last summer I visited Malta. It is an island in the middle of the Mediterranean. Consisting of 7 islands it is an ever increasing popular tourist resort due to it’s tropical climate, exciting nightlife, and a history dating back thousands of years. I have been there last year and it’s wonderful

    I suggest you visit http://www.paradisemalta.com to get a glimpse of this beauty

    Comment by Vacation Malta — June 3, 2007 @

  50. [...] your geography textbooks. Peruse these titles, if you please: a map of Stephen King’s Maine, a Tourist map of Gotham, Where on Earth Was Middle Earth?. Those are some of the more literary ones but people should check [...]

    Pingback by Read Or Die Weblog » Blog Archive » Websites for the Bored — July 13, 2007 @

  51. Akismet does a good job on comment spam.

    Comment by Anton Sherwood — September 13, 2007 @

  52. [...] real places that grew organically, but still have an element of invention to them. Obviously, maps of imaginary places are even better. Maybe the ultimate are imaginary maps of real places — an idea I can’t [...]

    Pingback by I like a pretend world that hangs together at {emoglasses} — September 18, 2007 @

  53. Hello people!

    Comment by zaas — December 21, 2007 @

  54. s prazdnikov vas

    Comment by Helga — February 3, 2008 @

  55. [...] City, a cidade do Batman, um mapa detalhado de uma cidade fictícia, veja abaixo a ilustração. Clique aqui e confira os [...]

    Pingback by TRAVELCAST - Podcast, Videocast, Blog sobre os melhores lugares para sua viagem - praia, montanha, cidades. » Blog Archive » Mapas Legais e Inúteis — February 25, 2008 @

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