In this book, the neoclassical city in 19th century Greece is examined as cultural modernism par excellence. Its main element is "Design", a new mechanism for the production of urban space. Here it is analyzed how it was introduced and spread in three large geographical units (Solid Greece and Peloponnese, Islands, Thessaly and "New Countries"). Eight decades are covered in time, from the establishment of the modern Greek state (1833) to the submission and implementation of a series of reform proposals for Athens and the reconstruction of the burned Thessaloniki of 1917.