Santo Domingo District

Bordering Westbrook to the north, Heywood and Pacifica to the west, and inhospitable badlands to the east, Santo Domingo is one of Night City’s oldest districts. It’s sub-districts are Arroyo and Rancho Coronado.

Santo Domingo’s unique location saved it from destruction during the Fourth Corporate War, and for the next dozen years after the conflict this area became a sshilter for tens of thousands of refugees. They’re gone now, relocated to the rebuilt districts, and Santo Domingo has returned to its former function as the city’s industrial park and power plant.

Various corporations are continually buying and selling parcels of land for new investments, and demolishing old factories and warehouses to make room for new projects. Construction sites are guarded by corporate security forces supported by drones. Competition between rival corporations is fierce and workers from Rancho Coronado can cause trouble too when a company announces insolvency.

NCPD Threat Level

WARNING: The NCPD has issued a warning about a vigilante force active in Santo Domingo known as the 6th Street Gang. Though the veterans who fill its ranks claim they protect their neighborhood from hostiles, the NCPD has received numerous reports of their involvement in typical gang activities, including but not limited to protection rackets and armed robbery.

 

Arroyo

The Arroyo District is under constant construction, but at the moment it consists of an old-fashioned nuclear power plant, robot factories, a logistics center, and a giant junk yard. Not all corporate investments have turned out to be profitable, and a significant number of the buildings in this area remain unfinished.

All of the operational high-tech sites including the Arasaka factory and Petrochem-Betterlife’s power plants are restricted areas with their own security forces that tend to shoot first and ask questions later.

The streets of Arroyo.

Rancho Coronado

Rancho Coronado looks like a self-sufficient town within Night City’s borders. The corporations who own the Arroyo factories planned and advertised it as a place for their own workers to live out the real American dream. Rancho Coronado consists almost solely of identical, cookie-cutter houses, reminiscent of the ones seen in the mid twentieth century American suburbs.

The district has it’s own bars, shopping, school, park, restaurants, and even a metro station. Security is overseen by the 6th Street gang, as the NCPD is spread too thin to maintain complete watch.

Residents of Rancho Coronado are primarily mid- and high-ranking factory workers, and some corpos who tired of Night City’s lights and noise. Most of them work in Arroyo and don’t need to leave Santo Domingo for their entire lives.

Living the American Dream in Rancho Coronado.