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Strange Maps

The strange cartography of Superman’s ever-shifting hometown

The latest “Superman” film sets Metropolis in the First State.
Illustrated map showing streets, parks, and landmarks of a coastal city bordered by Hob's River and Delaware Bay, with a compass rose in the lower right corner.
Tilt it 45 degrees clockwise, and this map of Metropolis looks a lot like downtown Manhattan. But the new Superman movie clearly hints that the superhero’s hometown is in Delaware. (Credit: Reddit/DC_Cinematic)
Key Takeaways
  • Over the years, Superman’s hometown has been identified with Chicago and New York, among others.
  • This year’s reboot of the movie franchise firmly places Metropolis in Delaware — if you know where to look.
  • The city’s location remains ambiguous, as it also closely resembles…Cleveland, Superman’s birthplace.
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Can you name three famous Delawareans? You probably get as far as Joe Biden and Aubrey Plaza. If you’re stuck for the last one, you can now confidently point to…Superman.

This year’s Superman reboot places Metropolis, the caped superhero’s hometown, firmly in the First State — if your eye is quick enough to catch a couple of hints.

New York, Chicago…Delaware?

A short close-up of Lois Lane’s car shows it sporting Delaware license plates. And at another point in the movie, Clark Kent walks past a Delaware flag, easily recognizable for its yellow diamond on a blue field.

James Gunn’s re-imagining of the Superman story is the first live-action movie to set Metropolis in Delaware. The 1978 Superman movie starring Christopher Reeve clearly identifies Metropolis with New York City, while the Metropolis in Man of Steel (2013) has a Chicago look and feel.

Why Delaware? It’s a return to tradition, of sorts. Over the decades, the DC Universe has dropped various hints that Metropolis is adjacent to Delaware Bay.

Split image: Left shows a TV scene with Delaware state flag circled. Right shows a woman by a car with a Delaware license plate, also circled. Text on left reads "NEW SUPERMAN TAKES PLACE IN DELAWARE!!.
Superman is a Delawarean. The cinematic hints that prove it: the Delaware state flag behind Clark Kent (left), Delaware plates on Lois Lane’s car (right). (Credit: Reddit/Delaware, Toyota USA)

But the movie does even more to please the fans of fictional geography: It offers an updated look at the city’s grid — again, for a tantalizingly brief moment. The exact location of Metropolis doesn’t bear scrutiny. By definition, fictional places have a tenuous relationship to real geography: a general area is required, but a precise place is impossible.

Take 1990s horror soap Twin Peaks, obviously set in the lumber-rich Pacific Northwest. Yet when asked in which state exactly the eponymous town was located, David Lynch quipped: “a state of confusion”.

Metropolis, with its much longer history, has a surprisingly circuitous geography. The definition that fits most of the city’s manifestations throughout nearly a century of comic books, TV series, and movies is that it is a major city in the Northeastern U.S., close to that other fictional megacity, Gotham, the home of Batman. In that standard incarnation, both places are clearly inspired by, though not entirely synonymous with, New York City.

Clark Kent, reporter for the Cleveland Evening News

But New York was not the initial inspiration for Superman’s hometown. Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel created Superman in 1933 in Cleveland, and that’s where the very first stories were set. In Action Comics #2 (July 1938), Superman’s four-eyed alter ego, Clark Kent, sends a picture of the military situation in the fictional South American republic of San Monte to his employer, the Cleveland Evening News.

When the early Superman stories were more widely republished, Cleveland was retroactively renamed Metropolis, but the generic city retained a particularly personal flavor. Shuster, who was also the comic’s original artist, modeled its urban landscape on the skyline of Toronto, the city of his younger years. Before it was called the Daily Planet, the newspaper that employed Clark Kent was known as the Daily Star, after the Toronto Daily Star, where Shuster had worked as a newspaper boy.

A comic book panel shows a gloved hand pointing to a map of New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and surrounding areas, with text referencing Wonder Woman and plans for New York.
This map, from ‘The World’s Greatest Super Heroes” (1978), gives a pretty detailed overview of the location of Gotham and Metropolis, in south Jersey and north Delaware, respectively. (Credit: DC Comics)

Eventually, the pull of New York City proved too strong, even for the Man of Steel. In Superman #2 (September 1939), Clark Kent sends a telegram to the editor of the Daily Star in Metropolis, N.Y. In the 1940s Superman comics, the superhero lives in Manhattan, which is simply contiguous with Metropolis. In that spirit, Action Comics #143 (April 1950) shows the Statue of Liberty in Metropolis Harbor.

In the decades since, both Metropolis and Gotham have had a magnetic relationship with New York, forever attracted by the Big Apple, and repelled by it if they get too close. But if (and when) they’re not in NYC, where are they? The references are oblique at best, and don’t always match up.

At one time, DC Comics proclaimed that both fictional cities are adjacent to New York City and face each other across a harbor. Another keeps the harbor, but moves both cities away from New York: Gotham in southern New Jersey, Metropolis across Delaware Bay in northern Delaware — sometimes specified as Delaware’s (very real) Kent County.

Metropolis, a.k.a. “The Big Apricot”

This yes-no-maybe relationship between Metropolis and New York City gave rise to several tongue-in-cheek references. Nicknamed “The Big Apricot,” Superman’s hometown is connected to Gotham via the Metro-Narrows Bridge, a nod to the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge linking Staten Island with Brooklyn. The two intertwined, L-shaped towers of LexCorp refer to the former Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. Centennial Park is a thinly disguised Central Park. And so on.

Comic book writer Frank Miller had a poetic view on the relationship between the three cities: “Metropolis is New York in the daytime, Gotham City is New York at night.” His colleague Dennis O’Neill put it like this: “Batman’s Gotham City is Manhattan below 14th Street at 11 minutes past midnight on the coldest night in November, and Metropolis is Manhattan between 14th and 110th Streets on the brightest, sunniest July day of the year.”

A sign for Public Square Museum District lists locations like the Museum of Modern Art and corporate offices, above a detailed map labeled Downtown Metropolis.
The map is fictional, as are the locations indicated just above. But Public Square is real, as is the Greater Cleveland Partnership. (Credit: Reddit/DC_Cinematic)

However, Metropolis has also been shown on maps used in various TV shows as located in Connecticut or on the West Coast. James Gunn’s reboot may help anchor the City of Tomorrow in Delaware.

Will the movie also establish the Metropolis city grid that is revealed in the movie as the commonly accepted look?

Visible for a brief moment in the movie, this map of downtown Metropolis clearly resembles downtown Manhattan, tilted 90 degrees counterclockwise. It shows the canonical Hob’s River and St Martin’s Island at the top of the map, as well as Delaware Bay.

There are plenty of green spaces scattered throughout the city, but it seems to lack the large, Central Park-like green area that is Centennial Park.

The streets are a goldmine for Superman superfans.

  • Of course, the creators are honored, with Shuster Drive intersecting with South Siegel Street.
  • South of Shuster Drive is Kubert Street, named after Larry Kubert, illustrator of Superman: Last Son of Krypton (2013).
  • The Yu Express Highway, near the Metropolis Municipal Building on the lower part of the map, is a reference to Leinil Francis Yu, who illustrated Superman: Birthright (2003/04).
  • Goyer Drive in the middle of the map honors David S. Goyer, who wrote the screenplay for Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016).
  • Not everyone is a writer or an illustrator. O’Heron Drive, parallel to South Siegel Street, most likely refers to Maureen O’Heron, costume buyer for Man of Steel (2013).

The map appears in a shot together with signage locating it in Public Square in the Museum District, with arrows pointing towards the Metropolis Museum of Modern Art, and the corporate offices of Metropolis Power and LuthorCorp.

That sign has the corporate branding of…the Greater Cleveland Partnership. Wait, what?

Terminal Tower, Progressive Park, and other Cleveland landmarks

Returning Metropolis to its very first location ticks a few boxes. Firstly, it is pleasingly circular. Secondly, it introduces an element of geographic obfuscation that fictional places need. And finally, it happens to be where much of the movie was shot in the summer of 2024.

Local Clevelanders who see the movie will recognize the Leader Building on Superior Avenue, standing in for the Daily Planet Building. Hawkgirl — played by Cleveland native Isabela Merced — swoops out of the sky with the Terminal Tower, a Cleveland landmark, in her background. The bad guys battle Superman at Progressive Field, home of the Cleveland Guardians baseball team. Superman lifts up Lois Lane for a romantic scene at The Cleveland Arcade, built in 1890 as one of America’s oldest shopping centers.

A metallic statue of a superhero with a cape, posed as if flying, mounted on a blue pedestal in front of a modern building.
Soaring 18 feet over Cleveland, this newly-unveiled likeness of Superman is made of – what else – stainless steel. (Credit: 19 News/YouTube)

And Public Square is indeed a major feature of real-life Cleveland. From there, it’s just a few minutes’ walk to the Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster Tribute Plaza, in front of the Convention Center. Inaugurated on August 2 of this year, it has a statue of Superman in flight, on top of a tapering blue pylon, with the sculpted figures of Jerry Siegel and his wife Joanne, the original model for Lois Lane, admiring him from a distance, while Joe Shuster is busy drawing the very first Superman comic.

Face the likeness of the superhero, suspended 18 feet above the street. Similarly, suspend your disbelief, and you’re no longer in Cleveland. Instead of celebrating a fictional hero in a real city, this monument honors the real hero of a fictional city. For a fleeting moment, you’re in Metropolis — wherever that is.

Strange Maps #1278

Got a strange map? Let me know at strangemaps@gmail.com.

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