A major crash at Greens Road and Vickery Drive stopped traffic Sunday morning at 9:05 AM, adding another incident to a stretch that's seen repeated collisions over the past month.
Responding officers worked the scene as traffic backed up through the intersection. The extent of injuries wasn't immediately available, but the crash severity meant a significant disruption to commuters in the area on what's typically a lighter-traffic Sunday morning.
According to LocalTrafficAccidents.com data, this intersection has recorded 4 incidents in the past 30 days, with 2 of those classified as major. Over the past 12 months, the location has logged 14 total incidents, 4 of them major. The pattern reflects a clustering of collisions at this particular crossing.
Historical state records tell part of the story. Per TxDOT CRIS public crash records dating back to January 2020, 17 crashes have occurred within roughly a quarter-mile of this intersection, with no fatalities recorded. Contributing factors as recorded by the investigating officer show that "Failed To Drive In Single Lane" was the most common cause, appearing in 3 of those crashes. Additionally, the hit-and-run rate at this corridor stands at 12.1%, meaning 4 of the 33 vehicles involved in crashes here over that period left the scene.
Sunday's weather was overcast with temperatures around 85 degrees—conditions that don't typically elevate crash risk, but the intersection's recent collision history suggests other factors are at play.
The Harris County total for the same 30-day window was substantially higher: 18,163 incidents with 34 fatalities across the county. That context underscores just how concentrated activity can be at specific locations even within a sprawling region.
If you were heading through that area Sunday morning, the crash likely cost you time. Traffic control should clear the scene as crews work, but Sunday incident response can be unpredictable depending on what utilities or structural issues need attention. Check current conditions before routing through the intersection over the next few hours.
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.