A major crash closed lanes on Fannin Street around 12:28 AM on Thursday, June 11, disrupting the early morning hours and drawing a response from emergency crews.
The incident occurred at 900 Fannin St in a residential area. Responding officers worked to clear the roadway, and the crash was ultimately resolved, though specific details on injuries, vehicle counts, or lane closure duration were not immediately available.
This crash adds to a striking pattern at this location. According to LocalTrafficAccidents.com data, Fannin Street has recorded 143 total incidents over the past 30 days—51 of them major crashes like this one. Over the past 90 days, the corridor saw 536 total incidents, including 205 major crashes and 2 fatalities. The 12-month count stands at 784 incidents, with 310 classified as major and 5 fatal.
Per TxDOT CRIS public crash records, the broader corridor near this location has logged 1,858 crashes since January 2020—4 of them fatal. The most common officer-recorded contributing factor across those crashes is "Disregard Stop And Go Signal," cited in 406 incidents. Additionally, hit-and-run crashes account for 10.1% of all incidents in the corridor, representing 378 of 3,745 vehicles involved.
While crashes here occur throughout the day and night rather than concentrating in a single window, Saturdays have historically been the busiest day, with 54 incidents logged over the past 90 days. The peak hour, when conditions permit analysis, is 4–5 PM, which recorded 26 crashes in the 30-day window.
Conditions at the time of this crash were relatively clear—scattered clouds and 81°F—though the incident still disrupted traffic in the early morning. The roadway was cleared following standard emergency response procedures.
**Update (8:30 AM CT):** The major crash at 900 FANNIN ST, first reported at 12:28 AM, has cleared after more than 8 hours. All lanes have reopened and normal traffic flow has resumed in the area.
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.