University of Houston Coastal Center

The University of Houston Coastal Center (UHCC) is designated by the Texas legislature as the home of the Texas Institute for Coastal Prairie Research and Education.  It contains a mosaic of habitats: high-quality coastal prairie, forested wetland and manmade wetlands, and coastal prairie in the process of restoration.

The Institute has a slice of the remaining Gulf Coast prairie at the landscape level, with about 200 acres of actively managed coastal prairie.  Another 100 acres is in the process of restoration.  The remaining acreage contains potential prairie restoration sites, forested wetland and manmade wetlands, and facilities for research and education. The focus of the Institute is on coastal prairie restoration, research, and education statewide, with the goal of eventually becoming a regional and national hub.

Prior to its transfer to the University of Houston, the site of the UHCC was acquired by the federal government as the location of Camp Wallace, which began construction as an Army Coast Artillery Replacement Training Center in 1940. The camp site was coastal tallgrass prairie that lay in the Highland Bayou watershed, which is part of the Galveston Bay watershed.

The University of Houston received the first parcel of property from the federal government in 1960. By 1972, the current 925-acre site was established as the UH Coastal Center.

The UHCC is the only field station owned by the University of Houston. It provides a unique and essential facility for faculty doing environmental education, research, restoration.  The UHCC provides an ideal location for field courses with an outdoor component. These have included students taking UH courses in Architecture, Biology and Biochemistry, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, English, and Science Education, and from other institutions in the Houston metropolitan area.

Major activities and uses at UHCC include:

  • Management of high-quality coastal prairie that acts as a gold standard for biodiversity
  • Restoration of degraded coastal prairie and enhancement of wetlands
  • Research benefiting from access to field sites and equipment
  • Student education in multiple disciplines
  • Volunteers and advisors assisting in habitat restoration and management
  • Community outreach to understand the history of the site and develop opportunities for the future
  • Refuge for wildlife and a living laboratory of native plant species
Year Founded
1972
Year Joined OBFS
2024
Size of Field Station (hectares)
101-500
FSML Web Address
https://uhcc.uh.edu/

Private nonprofit organization?
No
Universities affiliated / Parent Organization
University of Houston
Federal, state, or local governmental partners?
No
Member of the Virtual Field
No

Additional Information

Private nonprofit organization?
Names of Universities affilated
0
Federal, state, or local governmental partners?
No
Name of partner
Tribal partners/users
No
MSI/HBCU users
Yes
Community College users
No
Member of the Virtual Field
No

Visiting a FS/ML

Open to the Public
No
Year round staff
3-5
Seasonal staff
0
Overnight housing facilities/# of beds
0
Distance to emergency services
0-20 minutes
Library
No
Hiking trails
No
Internship employment
No

Environmental Information

Biomes
Temperate Grassland and Temperate Woodland and Shrubland
Minimum Elevation
0-100 meters
Maximum Elevation
0-100 meters
Köppen climate classification
C (temperate)
Freshwater habitats
Yes
Urban or rural
Agricultural fields
Yes

Research

REU host station
No
Dry lab space
No
Wet Lab space
Yes
Research vessels available
No
GIS capacity on site
No
Long term data sets
No
On site herbarium or voucher species
Formal Data Management Plan
No
Mesocosms, plots, stream diversions, or other sets ups for outdoor manipulative experiments
Yes
Date Joined OBFS
December 30, 2024