12 May 2026 · 6 min read
Why Swiss Grid Still Dominates Modern Web Design

The Swiss International Typographic Style emerged in the 1950s from designers working in Zürich and Basel — Max Bill, Josef Müller-Brockmann, Emil Ruder. What they codified was not an aesthetic: it was a method. Objective, structured, systematic. The grid was not decoration; it was logic made visible.
Decades later, their method maps almost perfectly onto the constraints of digital design. Responsive breakpoints are just a new grid. Component libraries are just a new modular system. The discipline required to maintain visual consistency across hundreds of states in a design system is the same discipline that kept printed ephemera coherent across a continent.
The grid never left. Designers who appear not to use it are usually using it unconsciously — or fighting its absence. The ones who understand it explicitly are the ones producing the most rigorous work.
