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Starbase, Texas

City in Texas From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Starbase, formerly Boca Chica Village or Kopernik Shores, is a city in Cameron County, Texas, United States, near the mouth of the Rio Grande. It lies 20 miles (32 km) east of the City of Brownsville on the Boca Chica peninsula, and forms part of the Brownsville–Harlingen–Raymondville and the Matamoros–Brownsville metropolitan areas. It is situated on Texas State Highway 4, locally known as Boca Chica Boulevard, immediately south of the South Bay lagoon, and is located about 2 mi (3.2 km) north of the mouth of the Rio Grande. The population was 500 as of 2025.[2]

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The town was initially formed in the late 1960s, and has changed greatly since 2018 as SpaceX came to purchase many of the properties in the village. Numerous construction projects are underway including a community center, school, clinic, and additional housing.[3][4] In 2014, the village was chosen as the location for the construction of a control facility for the SpaceX South Texas launch site, while the launch site itself was slated to be built just 2 miles (3.2 km) farther east, adjacent to Boca Chica State Park on the Texas Gulf Coast.[5][6] Flight testing—and even more frequent ground testing—of prototype rocket vehicles and rocket engines began in 2019 and have continued into 2025.

In March 2021, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced plans to incorporate a new city to be called Starbase, Texas in the area. Starbase was planned to include the existing Boca Chica Village, the SpaceX test site and launch site, and more of the surrounding Boca Chica area.[7][8] SpaceX submitted a petition in 2024 to Cameron County to formally incorporate the city of Starbase,[9] which voters approved on May 3, 2025, through a municipal ballot measure.[10] Formal incorporation occurred on May 20, 2025,[11] with Bobby Peden, a SpaceX vice-president, serving as mayor. Peden ran unopposed, as did two other residents with SpaceX ties who fill the two commissioner seats.[12]

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History

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Early history

In 1967, the settlement was founded as Kennedy Shores by John Caputa, a Chicagoan property developer, and was initially aimed at working-class Polish migrants.[13]

After building a community of about 30 ranch-style houses, the settlement was devastated by Hurricane Beulah later in 1967, which destroyed the restaurant and public utility systems. Electricity was restored, but many of the homes did not have potable water even decades later.[14]

In 1975, local resident Stanley Piotrowicz was voted in as town "mayor"; he renamed the village Kopernik Shores after Nicolaus Copernicus, and attempted to have the village recognized as an incorporated community, but this was denied by the state government. In 1990 and 2000, the population was 26 people.[13]

Although the name Kopernik Shores is no longer in popular use, it was still used occasionally in official contexts per the U.S. Board on Geographic Names as late as 2025.[15]

As of 2008, only six people were permanent residents of the village, which was dubbed a "ghost town".[16]

SpaceX launch site

In 2012, private space exploration company SpaceX named the Boca Chica area as a possible location for the construction of their future private commercial launch site. SpaceX started buying land in Boca Chica in 2012.[17] In August 2014, SpaceX announced that they had selected the Boca Chica area as the location for their South Texas Launch Site, and that their "control center" would be within the village itself, while the launch complex would be located two miles (3.2 km) to the east. Limited construction began that year,[18][19] and more extensive construction activities began around 2018.

Flight testing of the SpaceX Starship with a newly designed Raptor rocket engine began in 2019 and has continued into 2021.[20] With the village only a few miles from the test site Cameron County officials—following launch test permitting requirements set by the US regulatory authority, the FAA—began in August 2019 to request residents to stand outside their homes during any tests that involve loading of propellant fuel, due to perceived danger from shock-wave induced broken windows in the event of a test anomaly and explosion.[21][22]

The site has been criticized as a "sacrifice zone". It was seen as empty space by both SpaceX and the state; in 2018, for example, Elon Musk said: "We’ve got a load of land with nobody around, so if it blows up, it's cool."[17] At the time of its construction, many of the villagers’ homes were bought out with the threat of eminent domain. The launch site is an area where ‘negative externalities’ are located making it a sacrifice zone.[23][24]

In September 2019, SpaceX extended an offer to buy each of the houses in Boca Chica Village for three times the fair market value along with an offer of VIP invitations to future launch events. The amount of the offer was said to be "non-negotiable". Homeowners were initially given two weeks for that particular offer to remain valid.[25][26]

Some Boca Chica property owners were happy with the offer and made plans to accept, but other owners were not, noting that they had made substantial improvements to their properties and that the base valuation used by the September process used county tax assessment valuations and did not look at the specifics of each house so could not be a full appraised valuation.[27] The Houston Chronicle reported that the county seems to be taking a broader view of what is best for the "local economy, educational system, and quality of living in a region that is one of the poorest in the state."[27] Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño Jr. specifically mentioned consideration of the "450,000, 500,000 people that make up Cameron County, and the other million that make up the Valley, and also all the residents of Texas ... [though] it is terrible, personally, for those 10 or 20 remaining residential owners" in Boca Chica Village.[27]

The New York Times reported in late September that SpaceX extended the original two-week offer period by three weeks, in order to allow property owners to work with the county appraiser in order to potentially get their assessed valuations adjusted upward based on improvements beyond what the previous appraisal understood.[28]

Many residents[quantify] who accepted purchase offers had moved away by March 2020.[29]

A small number of house owners in Boca Chica Village did not accept the 2019 offer from SpaceX and remained in the village in October 2020, one year after the initial purchase offers from SpaceX were made to residents.[30]

"David Finlay, SpaceX’s Senior Director of Finance, told Boca Chica Village residents that this would be SpaceX’s final and best offer, and threatened the company would need to pursue alternate means to obtain the homes if the people of Boca Chica Village turned down the money. ... 'the scale and frequency of spaceflight activities at the site continue to accelerate, your property will frequently fall within established hazard zones in which no civilians will be permitted to remain, in order to comply with all federal and other public safety regulations. This email therefore represents SpaceX’s best and final purchase offer.'"[30]

Incorporation

In March 2021, Elon Musk stated that he was seeking to incorporate Boca Chica Village into Starbase, Texas.[31] Eddie Treviño Jr, the County Judge of Cameron County, indicated then that the county's commissioners court "were informed of SpaceX's endeavor", and said that SpaceX "must abide by all state incorporation statutes".[8]

Starbase includes the land in Boca Chica Village proper—where both the legacy house community and the SpaceX build site are located—as well as the land where the SpaceX test site and launch site is located, and more since Starbase is to be a municipality "much larger than Boca Chica".[7][10]

On May 20, 2025, Starbase was formally incorporated as a Type C general city with a commission form of government, comprising a mayor and two commissioners.[11]

In May 2024, Cameron County submitted a formal proposal to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names, to rename the Village from Kopernik Shores (still its official name for federal purposes, despite having fallen out of common use) to Starbase, which was publicly posted on their website in July 2024.[32] At the May 2024 meeting of the Board's Domestic Names Committee, doubts were expressed over whether the proposed name violates the Board's policy against recognizing names intended to promote a commercial enterprise.[33] As of October 2024, the Board was awaiting feedback on the proposal from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Texas Geographic Names Committee.[34]

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