Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Hurricane-Harvey-Emergency-Shelter-in-Houston-27MZIFJXG9B6S.htmlConceptually similarHurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EJCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0ELCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EMCompleted★★★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0ENCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EOCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EPCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EQCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0ETCompleted★★★★Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonGP0STR0EVCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STR0F9Hurricane Harvey Emergency Shelter in HoustonPeople settle into an emergency shelter at the Convention Center in Houston, Texas. Hurricane Harvey slammed into the Texas coast some 175 miles (280 kilometers) from Houston, but the nation's fourth-largest city has never needed a direct strike from a catastrophic storm to flood. Rain from the hurricane is expected to fall for days compounding the problem for much of the state.Locations:Houston-North America-Texas-United States of AmericaDate:28 Aug, 2017Credit:© Mannie Garcia / GreenpeaceMaximum size:3600px X 2203pxKeywords:American Red Cross-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change-Climate change impacts-Emergency shelters-High angle view-Hurricanes-Indoors-KWCI (GPI)-People-VictimsShoot:Hurricane Harvey Red Cross Shelter in HoustonPeople settle into an emergency shelter at the Convention Center in Houston, Texas. Hurricane Harvey slammed into the Texas coast some 175 miles (280 kilometers) from Houston, but the nation's fourth-largest city has never needed a direct strike from a catastrophic storm to flood. Rain from the hurricane is expected to fall for days compounding the problem for much of the state.Related Collections:Hurricane Harvey Aftermath in Texas (Photos & Videos)