A $56.9 million flood mitigation project in Kingwood is moving forward following actions taken by Harris County Commissioners Court and Houston City Council in late March and early April, respectively.

What happened?

Harris County commissioners awarded a nearly $29.39 million flood mitigation project to Brice Construction & Design LLC during a business court meeting March 31. Roughly one week later, Houston City Council approved a $10 million appropriation out of the Reimbursement of Equipment/Project Fund and authorized an interlocal agreement with Harris County Flood Control District for the same project, during the April 7 council meeting.

The Taylor Gully Channel Conveyance Improvements and Woodridge Stormwater Detention Basin project aims to reduce the risk of flooding in Kingwood through a combination of channel conveyance improvements and a stormwater detention basin, per the HCFCD website. The project was identified as part of the Kingwood Drainage Analysis Study and is being funded with $41.94 million from Community Development Block Grant-Mitigation funding and $19.2 million from other funding sources, per the HCFCD website.

About the project

A stormwater detention basin will be constructed on a 267-acre site located within the former Woodridge neighborhood development, which is located near Woodland Hills Driven and Northpark Drive in Montgomery County, per the HCFCD website. The land is jointly owned by the city of Houston and HCFCD.

Upon completion, the two-compartment, wet-bottom detention basin will be able to provide a combined 1,127 acre-feet of stormwater storage.

In addition to the stormwater detention basin, channel conveyance improvements are also planned for Taylor Gully, which runs primarily through the Elm Grove, Mills Branch, North Kingwood Forest and Woodstream Village subdivisions. Per the HCFCD website, the conveyance improvements will occur starting upstream at the Montgomery-Harris county line and end downstream near Maple Bend Drive.

The project will be completed in two phases:

Phase 1: Taylor Gully channel conveyance improvements and Compartment 1 of the Woodridge Stormwater Detention BasinPhase 2: Compartment 2 of the Woodridge Stormwater Detention Basin (dependent on funding)Quote of note

“This is much needed flood mitigation in the Kingwood area,” Houston City council member Fred Flickinger—who represents Kingwood—said during the April 7 meeting. “This area didn’t even flood during [Hurricane] Harvey; there was a new development that took place actually in Montgomery County that affected this area, and the county and the city got together and purchased that property before the land actually got developed—although after it was cleared—and this is going to go a long way and actually improve the situation of those people.”

What’s next

Construction on Phase 1 is expected to begin soon, Harris County Precinct 3 Commissioner Tom Ramsey said via Facebook on April 8.

“I’m very proud to see this project moving into construction, and bringing critical flood improvements to Kingwood,” Ramsey said in an emailed statement to Community Impact. “We’re also working on the design of the Kingwood Diversion channel, which we’ve secured construction funds for. Precinct 3 remains focused on reducing flood risk for the area and providing much-needed relief to its residents.”

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