A major crash at Hollister Street and Black Clay Road sent at least one person to the hospital early Saturday morning, adding to a troubling pattern at this intersection.
The crash happened at 5:56 AM on Saturday, June 6. Responding officers found significant damage and injuries at the scene. At least one person was transported for medical care. The exact cause and full vehicle count remain under investigation.
This intersection is showing a concentrated spike in collisions. According to LTA data, 13 crashes have occurred here in the past 30 days alone — 6 of them major incidents like this one. Over the past 90 days, the count climbs to 49 total crashes, with 23 classified as major. The pattern extends back: 79 crashes have hit this location in the past 12 months, 36 of them serious enough to warrant major incident classification.
Interestingly, this intersection doesn't follow the typical Houston weekday commute pattern. According to LTA data, crashes here skew toward the weekend rather than weekday traffic, and Saturdays are the single busiest day — with 9 crashes recorded over the past 90 days. The busiest hour is 10–11 AM, though this morning's incident happened much earlier.
State crash records provide additional context. Per TxDOT CRIS public crash records, this corridor has seen 211 crashes since January 2020, with no fatalities. The most common officer-recorded contributing factor is "Failed To Yield Right Of Way - Turning Left," cited in 48 crashes at this location. That pattern — left-turn conflicts — dominates the crash narrative here.
A secondary note from state records: hit-and-run incidents account for 12.2% of the crashes at this intersection, meaning roughly one in eight vehicles involved fled the scene.
Weather conditions at the time were overcast, 77 degrees — not adverse. Conditions did not appear to be a factor in this particular incident.
The road was reopened once the scene was cleared and debris removed. If you're traveling through this intersection, remain alert — the data shows this is a high-frequency collision zone, particularly on weekend mornings.
This report was produced by LTA's editor-designed production system under the executive editorial direction of Dennis R. Mundy, Executive Editor. The system combines our proprietary data pipeline with AI-assisted drafting to deliver verified incident coverage to LTA's editorial standards.