Punta Arenas, also known as Punta Arenas Condominium, is a planned community for workers in the oil industry, northern Peru. It is situated on the coastal outskirts of the city of Talara in Piura region, adjoining the south edge of the Talara refinery.[1] Originally built for workers from the US, today it is the property of state-owned Petroperú.[2]

Punta Arenas
neighborhood
Map
Coordinates: 4°35′24″S 81°17′07″W / 4.5901°S 81.2854°W / -4.5901; -81.2854
CountryPeru
RegionPiura
ProvinceTalara
Postal code
20811

History edit

Punta Arenas was originally built by the International Petroleum Company [es] (IPC).[3] It was designed to house the supervisors and administrative staff. Once an employee of the company (originally Americans) was appointed supervisor, he and his family were relocated and entitled to one of the houses on a loan basis.[citation needed]

It featured all the facilities that a resident American family would need: 110-volt A/C, a constant gas supply, an exclusive two–pool club for residents, a beach, one private residence for the company manager and another one for official guests overlooking the beach, and an elementary school (Talara Staff School)[4] and middle school which initially followed the American school system. Sidewalks were nonexistent, although a 25 km/h speed limit was in place. All houses were equally attractive, with red bricks, flat roofs, ample space, and lawns. There is a resemblance between Punta Arenas and the area of Coral Gables, Florida, coincidentally the location of IPC's headquarters in the 1940s.[citation needed]

The neighborhood was organized around the letters of the alphabet. Each block of ten houses was assigned a letter, and each house was given a number. Therefore, a given house would be B-10, or W-5. As years went by, and as need for more houses grew, letter combinations like CH and the letter Z were added. Some blocks of houses were specifically designed for unmarried persons, featuring individual rooms with shared bathrooms.[citation needed]

The Talara refinery was at the core of the 1968 Peruvian coup d'état.[5] General Juan Velasco Alvarado almost immediately ordered the seizure and nationalization of its operations and premises, creating Petroperú, in what was a symbolically important act for the new government.[6][7] The electric power gradually moved to Peruvian standards (220 volts), and the school started to follow the Peruvian school system, offering secondary education. During the 1970s, Punta Arenas retained certain American customs like Thanksgiving and Halloween until all the US citizens left or retired from Petroperú. In the 1980s, virtually no Americans lived in Talara or in Punta Arenas.[citation needed]

The 1980s economic crisis during Alan García's first government widened inequalities and caused resentment from low-income residents of Talara who saw Punta Arenas and its inhabitants as beneficiaries of special privileges. For example, during the 1983 floods caused by El Niño, while the population of the city struggled to find food at excessive prices, Petroperú chartered airplane flights to ship food supplies (including fresh meat and poultry) for its supervisors and their families. Other benefits included transportation, free education, school materials, water, electricity and gas, which were attractive for anyone who accepted to relocate in a now-isolated[clarification needed] area of the country.[citation needed]

Towards the end of the 20th century, Punta Arenas became slowly uninhabited due to the decline of Petroperú.[citation needed] Talara refinery faced problems due to declining production and investments and falling oil prices.[6] Some state assets were to be privitized under President Alberto Fujimori's CEPRI commission.[8] This included the residences at Punta Arena, which as of 1999 were rented to other companies.[6] However, the privitization did not go ahead.[9] As an attempt to keep Punta Arenas alive, the houses were unsuccessfully offered for sale or rent to private third parties. Many of the houses became derelict and were demolished. Only the houses that surround the club and the school remain.[needs update][citation needed]

Further reading edit

Peruvian psychoanalyst Jorge Bruce wrote a book of short stories entitled Arena de Punta Arenas (1981) about Punta Arenas in the era when it was under the management of IPC at the beginning of the 1960s.

References edit

  1. ^ García, Maribel Aragón; Farías, Eduardo Bustos; Mendoza, Yaxkin Flores (2 June 2023). "Environmental Education Based on the Analysis of the Social Recovery Mechanisms Implemented Post-COVID". Revista de Gestão Social e Ambiental. pp. e03492–e03492. doi:10.24857/rgsa.v17n3-004. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  2. ^ "Aclaración sobre los bienes de Petroperú en Talara". Revista ProActivo (in Spanish). 19 February 2024. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  3. ^ "Petroperú clarifies inaccurate data on real estate property". petroperu.com.pe. Petroperú. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  4. ^ "Barbara Walton, 10-Year-Old Diplomat, Just 'Likes' School". The Tipton Daily Tribune. Sep 20, 1951. p. 8. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  5. ^ "International Petroleum Company (IPC) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  6. ^ a b c "Report 216/99EN: Peru Reform and Privatization in the Hydrocarbon Sector" (PDF). World Bank. July 1999. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  7. ^ PERU21, NOTICIAS (18 February 2024). "Las comodidades de Petroperú | Condominio Punta Arenas | Refinería de Talara | Club Petroperú | Edificio Petroperú | | INVESTIGACION". Peru21 (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 April 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "BNamericas - Petroperu Calls Talara, Iquitos Refineries A..." BNamericas.com. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  9. ^ Barrios, German (27 October 2017). "Why Camisea Is Feasible Today". Law and Business Review of the Americas. 6 (4): 525. Retrieved 15 April 2024.