As Greenwich Village was once a rural, isolated hamlet to the north on the Manhattan Island, its street layout is more organic than the planned grid pattern. Greenwich Village was allowed to keep the 18th century street pattern of what is now called the West Village: areas that were already built up when the plan was implemented, west of what is now Greenwich Avenue and Sixth Avenue, resulted in a neighborhood whose streets are dramatically different, in layout, from the ordered structure of the newer parts of Manhattan