The Columbus Dispatch

Blue Origin brings space tourism to tiny Texas town

- Sean Murphy

VAN HORN, Texas – For years, the official letterhead for the small town of Van Horn, tucked neatly among the foothills of the Guadalupe Mountains, read simply: “Farming, ranching, mining.”

And while there is still some farming and ranching in this far West Texas community, and a talc mine still operates near the edge of town, there’s another booming business in its midst: space tourism.

The sprawling spaceport of Blue Origin, the company founded by business magnate Jeff Bezos in 2000, is located about 25 miles outside of the town of about 1,800 residents on what was once desolate desert ranchland. On Tuesday, the company launched four people on a 10-minute trip into space, including Bezos, his brother, Mark, female aviation pioneer Wally Funk, and Oliver Daemen, an 18-year-old Dutchman and last-minute fill-in for the winner of a $28 million charity auction who had a scheduling conflict. Funk, at age 82, and Daemen became the oldest and youngest people in space.

“That’s the big buzz in this little town,” said Valentina Muro as she rang up a customer at the Broadway Café along Van Horn’s main strip. “It’s kind of put Van Horn on the map a little more than it was.”

The town, which sprouted up in the late 1800s during the constructi­on of the Texas and Pacific Railway, now is mostly an overnight stop for travelers along Interstate 10, which runs parallel to the town’s main road, dotted with hotels, restaurant­s, truck stops and convenienc­e stores.

“Our biggest driving force is the tourism dollar,” said Van Horn Mayor Becky Brewster.

The town’s proximity to Big Bend National Park, the Guadalupe Mountains, an ancient barrier reef that includes the four highest peaks in Texas, and New Mexico’s Carlsbad Caverns makes it an ideal pit stop for tourists.

“We often plug ourselves as the crossroads of the Texas Mountain

Trail,” Brewster said.

As for the impact that Blue Origin’s operations have had on the town, the reaction among locals is mixed. While employees and contractor­s have been working at the facility since about 2005, Brewster said it’s just been in the last five years or so that workers for Blue Origin have started integratin­g themselves into the community.

“When they were in the developmen­t stages, Blue Origin was so secretive about what was going on, their people couldn’t really socialize because they couldn’t talk about their work and things like that,” Brewster said. “And it was like, here are the Blue Origin people and here are the Van Horn people. But that’s starting to change for the better.”

One of the roadblocks to connecting locals and the scientists and engineers who work at Blue Origin is one that plagues many rural American communitie­s – a lack of available housing. A local developer constructe­d about a dozen two-bedroom homes and a small apartment complex, and all were rented out for Blue Origin employees. Of the roughly 25 employees and contractor­s that work at the facility, Brewster said only about 40% live in Van Horn.

Krissy Lerdal, whose husband is an engineer for the company, said he lived in a local hotel for more than four years before finally relocating his family to Van Horn from New Mexico.

“When we looked to buy here, there were five houses on the market, none of which passed inspection, and so we had to bring in a modular home,” Lerdal said.

In the three-and-a-half years that she has lived here, Lerdal said she has worked hard to integrate herself into the community. Her children attend the local school system, she joined the Women’s Service League, and she has a seat on the city’s zoning board.

“I know the people who are living here and bought homes here have been trying hard to be involved,” she said. “It’s hard when most of the community is all related. We’re the outsiders and we don’t want to step on toes, but we want to be involved, and it’s a hard line to walk.”

 ?? SEAN MURPHY/AP ?? The side of a building in Van Horn, Texas, is adorned with a mural of Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos on Saturday, just days before Bezos launched into space from the Blue Origin spaceport about 25 miles outside of the West Texas town.
SEAN MURPHY/AP The side of a building in Van Horn, Texas, is adorned with a mural of Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos on Saturday, just days before Bezos launched into space from the Blue Origin spaceport about 25 miles outside of the West Texas town.

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