Human Nature
Collisions and Resiliency in
Galena Park’s Urban Food Desert
University of Houston, ARCH 5500
Image Credits: Clockwise, Benjamin Blankenburg and Shaila George,
Celeste Ponce
Situated north of the Ship Channel and east of Houston’s downtown, the City of Galena Park is home to a community of 10,000 people. The original settlement accommodated
agriculture and ranching livestock but by the 1880s the city converted into a “railroad center” serving the new Port of Houston. The city’s industry shifted once again during the early 1900’s with the introduction of the petrochemical industry and the community established a population of Ship Channel
workers. Traces of the all-white segregated schools and the neighboring all black community, Clinton Park, also remain with the dead-end streets delineating where the former
barricade existed between both neighborhoods.
Today, over 80% of the city’s population is Hispanic. Nearly thirty percent of the population live in poverty and face
significant health and environmental challenges from the
toxic air exposure released from the high-risk industrial
facilities that surround the community. The city is also
vulnerable to experiencing the grave impacts of chemical
release during a facility accident or explosion. The proximity to the industrial facilities poses infrastructural threats due to the rail lines that surround the city and intersect with the city’s exits making it difficult to for emergency help to reach the
accidents. The Ship Channel creates flooding problems,
including the largest reported gas spill during Hurricane
Harvey. With more than 50 industrial facilities surrounding the low-income community, the “societal impacts” are often
overlooked or even “justified.”emical and refinery plants in the nation.