Where the Manhattan Project’s Minds Went Home
Gold Coast Historic District
While most Richland residents lived in nearly identical Alphabet Homes, one neighborhood stood apart — larger homes, tree-lined streets, and Columbia River views. This was the Gold Coast, built for the elite minds of the Manhattan Project.
A Prestigious Address for a Classified Community
As Richland rose from the sagebrush, housing was assigned based on occupation and clearance level. Nowhere was this more evident than in the Gold Coast — a leafy neighborhood where high-ranking scientists, engineers, and administrators lived in larger, custom-built homes along the Columbia River.
Unlike the modest Alphabet Homes, these residences featured architectural upgrades and river views, offering a glimpse into the hierarchy embedded within wartime Richland. But they weren’t just symbols of privilege — they were home to some of the Manhattan Project’s most critical minds, people who worked behind locked doors on secrets that would change the world.
The Gold Coast remains a highly sought-after neighborhood today, with many original homes lovingly preserved. Walking its streets offers a glimpse into the social structure of a city designed for both secrecy and efficiency — and the lives of those entrusted with its most sensitive work.