Union Carbide: Repurposed Headquarters

Like the characters in a horror movie, slowly realizing that they have wandered into a place they Should Not Have, I visited a large Connecticut facility with an excitingly retrofuturistic aesthetic and realized the true backstory of the place.

Union Carbide: Repurposed Headquarters II

I was initially surprised that a new residential community would have such obviously older architecture, and pieced together that this must have previously been a corporate headquarters. The ample parking and dramatic hilltop location suggested something ambitious.

Union Carbide: Repurposed Headquarters I

Reading about the history of the site on arrival, however, I came to realize that this was the former headquarters of Union Carbide—responsible for the most harmful chemical spill in human history, the Bhopal Disaster, responsible for exposing more than 500,000 people to methyl isocyanate, ultimately leading to the deaths of thousands. As a chemistry Ph.D., the effect of standing in the headquarters of the company when this event took place (the building opened in 1982 and the disaster occurred in 1984) was deeply unsettling—a reminder of the responsibility that chemists hold for the impacts of our work.

Union Carbide: Repurposed Headquarters III

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