[citation needed] If we leave aside the development of Lidická streets (emerging since the 13th century) and the area around Kapitána Jaroš and 28.
Října Square (which form a separate entity from an urban planning point of view), the development of the residential district on the plateau above Lužánky only began in the 1860s.
Until that time, this part of Černá Pole, which today belongs to Brno-sever, was completely undeveloped with many orchards and vineyards.
Creation continued with flourishing in the years between the two world wars, when, for example, the Villa Tugendhat was built here, and it was completed only in the period of so-called socialist realism.
The authorities reacted to the densification of the development by changing the cadastral boundaries in the territory of Černá Pole - in 1929, the boundaries of Horní and Dolní Cejl, Husovice and Královo Pole were changed, and in 1939 the border between the Horní and Dolní Cejl cadastral territories and the Velká Nová Ulice and Červená, on a line that coincides with the section of the modern border of the Brno-sever and Brno-střed districts, which runs along the lines of Drobného and Traubova streets.