A crash on Crestdale Drive at 9:54 AM on Sunday, June 28th sent at least one person to the hospital and underscored a growing pattern of collisions at this residential Harris County location.
Responding officers arrived to find major damage and injured parties. While exact lane-closure details remain limited, the incident disrupted traffic in the area during what's typically a busy window for this corridor.
This crash marks the 15th incident recorded at this location in the past month alone, according to LocalTrafficAccidents.com data. The timing fits a clear pattern: crashes here skew toward the weekend rather than the weekday commute, and the single busiest hour is 9-10 AM, when three crashes occurred during the same period last month. Sunday is the highest-incident day at this address over the past 90 days, with 10 crashes recorded.
Over the past 90 days, LTA data shows 33 total incidents at this address—13 of them major. The 12-month picture is even steeper: 59 incidents, 30 classified as major.
According to TxDOT CRIS public crash records, the broader corridor near 3129 Crestdale Drive has seen 156 crashes since January 2020, including two fatalities. Contributing factors as recorded by the investigating officer, per TxDOT CRIS, show "Failed To Control Speed" as the most common factor, cited in 40 crashes at the location.
The weather was clear at the time of Sunday's crash—90 degrees and sunny—which doesn't explain the frequency, but the speed-control pattern recorded in state data suggests driver behavior remains a consistent factor in collisions here.
Authorities cleared the scene and traffic resumed normal flow. If you were in the area this morning and saw what happened, local law enforcement may still be collecting witness information.
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.