Developer Buys 5300 Acres of Floodplains, Floodways, Wetlands from Ryko
Update 10/16/25 at 10am – The Planning Department intends to recommend deferring consideration of the general plan discussed below until after the City of Houston District E and Harris County Precinct 3 have have met with the new owner.
10/15/2025 – San Jacinto Preserve and a sister company, Scarborough Houston LLC have purchased approximately 5300 acres of land west of Kingwood from Ryko Development and its sister company, Pacific Indio Properties.
Ryko tried for years to develop the property, most of which is floodplains, floodways and wetlands where the San Jacinto West Fork, Spring Creek, Turkey Creek and Cypress Creek all converge.
Concerns about flooding may have triggered Ryko’s sale after a succession of rapid-fire setbacks:
- May 2024 floods and the second largest release from Lake Conroe in the history of the SJRA rekindled memories of Harvey’s devastation.
- A Townsen Blvd. extension through the property was taken off Montgomery County’s 2025 Road Bond at the request of neighboring residents and MoCo Precinct 3 commissioner Ritch Wheeler.
- The Montgomery County Engineer blasted Ryko’s drainage study
- Harris County Flood Control did not approve Ryko’s flood-mitigation plans.
- Harris County Precinct 3 Commissioner Ramsey lined up against a bridge that would connect the area to Humble.
Sale of Property to San Jacinto Preserve, LP, Scarborough Houston LLC
Under public pressure on all sides and faced with the loss of connectivity and critical infrastructure support, Pacific Indio sold the property to San Jacinto Preserve, LP and Scarborough Houston LLC in August of this year. Here is the Special Warranty Deed.
Both buyers have common ownership and management, as with Ryko and Pacific Indio. Companies often try to limit liability by setting up different companies for different projects. That way, if one part of the empire encounters trouble, it won’t bring down other parts.
In this case, the names of two men keep showing up: Ryan Burkhardt and James R. Feagin. Among the many companies under their control:
- San Jacinto Preserve, LP
- San Jacinto Preserve GP, LLC
- SJ Preserve Ventures LP
- SJ Preserve Advisors GP, LP
- Scarborough Houston LLC
- Scarborough Lane Development.
Scarborough Lane Development appears to be at the top of the food chain and headquarters in Addison, TX, a north Dallas suburb. All the other companies list the same address. So even though company names change, the same people control everything.
Scarborough Lane Development’s website says its “always committed to protecting the environment.” And it brags that it is “capable of handling the most challenging development projects.” We shall see.
Land Virtually Covered by Floodplains, Floodways
This project will test their talent as this map in Ryko’s drainage analysis shows. Only the small, dark gray areas in the red outline are above the 500-year floodplain.

But keep in mind, that the floodplains will soon expand when FEMA releases new maps based on data acquired after Hurricane Harvey. The floodplain mapping above is from 2014. It predates the Memorial Day Flood, Tax Day Flood, Harvey, and the May 2024 flood.
On Houston Planning Commission Agenda for 10/16/25
San Jacinto Preserve’s (SJP) general plan is on the Houston Planning Commission’s consent agenda for Thursday, 10/16/25. See below. Their engineers chose to render the floodplains in barely distinguishable shades of gray this time.
Lisa Clark, who Chairs the Houston Planning Commission, also represents the San Jacinto Preserve.
Both Harris County Precinct 3 and City of Houston District E have requested the planning commission to postpone consideration until they have had the opportunity to meet with the developer and learn more about the plans.
Here is the General Plan that SJP submitted to the Planning Commission.

This is a pretty high-level plan. It shows planned major thoroughfares, easements, pipelines, property boundaries, drill sites, and floodplains/floodways. But it’s not yet a plat that shows the street layouts of neighborhoods or homesites.
However, it does still show a Townsen Blvd. extension bridging across Spring Creek into Humble. That piqued my interest.
I called Mr. Burkhardt in Addison for clarification, but he did not return my phone call to confirm exactly what their plans are. So we shall have to wait and see. They will have challenges, no doubt.
MoCo Residents Successfully Protest Connectivity Plan
Yesterday, Benders Landing Estates (BLE) Property Owners Association (immediately north of the SJP property had a proposal on the Montgomery County Commissioners Court Agenda. SJP wanted to connect their new neighborhoods through a quiet, residential street (Shady Hills Landing Lane) in BLE.
They felt the street was not suited to handling the volume of traffic that a 5000+ acre development would generate. And their plan to block SJP access through the street succeeded.
Commissioners voted to abandon a one-foot-wide portion of Shady Hills Landing Lane in Benders Landing Estates Section 7. The land will vest to adjoining property owners, who can then effectively block SJP residents from exiting any new subdivisions through their property.
Commissioners Court unanimously approved the measure. It was a minor victory and likely will not affect the long-term war. But it showed the will of the community.
Profits Over People?
The San Jacinto Preserve development comes with inherent flood risks. At this point, we need to wait and see what they propose. At a minimum, it will likely include:
- A new drainage-impact analysis
- New plats that show the exact location of homes and their density relative to floodplains
- Street layouts
- The amount of impervious cover added
- How much forest is lost
- Flood-mitigation plans
- A no-adverse-impact statement from Texas-certified engineers.
- Environmental/wetlands studies including impacts on water quality in Lake Houston

One seasoned hydrologist held out little hope for the safe development of this property. She told me that developing it would be like aiming a firehose at Kingwood. She also suggested that the developer was putting “profits over people” and that the people of Humble and Kingwood should oppose it for their own safety. Check back often as news develops.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 10/15/25
2969 Days since Harvey
The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.











