Houston City Council Member Dave Martin announced today that Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD) will begin demolition of several home-buyout properties in Forest Cove next week.
What 240,000 CFS can do to steel and stone.
The demolition in the Forest Cove Town Home community will begin with units:
803 and 805 Timberline Court
1060 Marina Drive
HCFCD plans to submit the demolition request for 1050 Marina Drive shortly.
Units in the Forest Cove townhome association destroyed by Harvey.
County Completing Buyouts
Currently there are several other units that are almost completely under HCFD’s ownership. When they are completely owned, their demolition will follow.
Martin thanked City of Houston Department of Neighborhoods Director TaKasha Francis for her assistance with expediting the demolition permits.
Within a few years, this could become part of Harris County’s new Edgewater Park.
“These town homes are a constant reminder to the community of the devastation caused by Hurricane Harvey,” said Martin. “HCFCD has done a tremendous job in keeping our office informed on the status of the demolition process for these Hurricane Harvey buyout properties.”
To learn more about HCFCD’s buyout program, visit their website.
Harvey swept away several of the townhomes in this area, leaving nothing but the foundations. Owners of several of the surviving units reported water as high as 17 to 22 feet at the peak of the flood.
Perched on the precipice with a waterfront view.Before the City picked up the trash. After Harvey, the townhomes became a convenient location for illegal dumpers, looters and squatters.
A Metamorphosis in the Making
I will cover this story as it develops. I have talked with both Harris County County Precinct 4 Commissioner Jack Cagle and the City of Houston Parks Board about this area. It’s about to undergo a metamorphosis. Within several years, this could become part of beautiful riverfront park that adds new luster to the community, provides a recreational resource to residents, and puts distance between homes and future floods.
Posted by Bob Rehak on March 8, 2019
556 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/SJR_304_018.jpg?fit=1800%2C1200&ssl=112001800adminadmin2019-03-08 17:50:542019-03-08 17:51:12Demolition of Home-Buyout Properties in Forest Cove Scheduled to Begin March 11
Seitzinger states in the opening that flooding cannot be eliminated when you get as much rainfall as we did with Harvey. But then goes on to say that, “There may be ways to limit the flooded areas in future.” His paper is intended to provide a better understanding of what happened. He hopes this will help design remedies that make the area more resilient to flooding.
River Obstructions Creating Backwater Effects
Seitzinger identifies six river obstructions creating backwaters:
The narrow Riverway near Lonestar College/Kingwood
The I-69 Bridge
A sand bar by the Kingwood Country Club
The Stream Mouth Bar
The 1960 Bridge
The Lake Houston Dam
He then spends the next 70 pages analyzing what happened at each of these during the flood and developing various strategies to deal with them. He breaks his recommendations up into short- and long-term.
Short-Term Recommendations
Short term recommendations include:
Establishing a regional authority to provide multi-county coordination on legislative, operation, mitigation and funding efforts for flood control
Reviewing and updating SJRA and CWA water release protocols.
Installing additional water-flow and level gages on the tributaries and Lake Houston with predictive flow algorithm.
Providing a better flood warning system for the general public.
Reviewing and legislating new sand-mining procedures and enforcement fines to prevent sand loss into the rivers during high water
Reviewing communications. Include clear regional decision maker assignments and house-to-house warnings for all homes in the floodway and below the 100 yr. levels at a minimum
Removing West Fork sand bars to re-establish main channel flow
Annual West Fork maintenance dredging.
Long-Term Recommendations
Longer-range recommendations for investigation and implementation include:
Dredging to return channel depths in West Fork and East Fork to original depths
Adding additional, controlled, water-release capability to Lake Houston
Widening the 59 bridge and FM 1960 bridge channels
Widening the 59 bridge and West Lake Houston Parkway bridge entrance and exit channels
Stopping flood plain re-development west of Hwy 59
Setting new regulations for storm zoning and land reservation
Adding controlled storm reservoirs to Cypress, Spring, and Lake Creeks and East Fork
Develop public-private partnership for river-sand removal and reclamation.
Limitations of Study
Seitzinger’s presentation is very technical; it is not easy reading. He targets other engineers with this and requests peer review.
One thing that will require validation: his velocity calculations. They seem at odds with velocities reported by rescue workers. I talked to an HPD officer, for instance, who estimated velocity in the vicinity of the West Lake Houston Parkway Bridge at 10 to 20 miles per hour. By calculating peaks as they moved downriver, Seitzinger estimates 1.03 mph. The difference could have to do with water jetting through the bottlenecks that Seitzinger describes. Unequal distribution of rainfall across upstream tributaries could also affect offsets among downstream peaks. Regardless…
Value of Study
Seitzinger provides all the data for others to check his calculations. The main value of an effort like this is that it collects all the crucial data in one place for posterity, cross-examination and comparison.
Kingwood is lucky to have many talented engineers, such as Seitzinger. This should stimulate much discussion.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 3/8/2019
556 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Screen-Shot-2019-03-08-at-2.14.26-PM-copy.jpg?fit=1500%2C857&ssl=18571500adminadmin2019-03-08 14:56:452019-03-08 15:11:35Seitzinger Contributes Second Study on Harvey, Addressing Timing and Backwater Issues
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers supplied this graphic. It updates the public on the latest dredging progress.
Two dredges, moving west to east (left to right), expect to complete dredging by the end of April, seven weeks from now. It was originally a nine month project scheduled to end around April 1, but heavy weather and multiple floods during December and January set the contractors back.
Great Lakes Dredge and Dock operates the red dredge that started at River Grove Park and is working its way toward the project midpoint.
Callan Marine operates the blue dredge that started at the midpoint and is working its way toward the end.
With roughly 50 days remaining (about 15-20% of the time depending on how many weather days you allow), the corps appears to be about 70% done. That means they must hustle to make up time. The contractors are already working 24/7.
Parents who want to give their kids a treat can take them down to Kings Harbor to watch the dredging. I was there today. It is truly impressive. There’s lots of big equipment on the river moving more sand than the Astrodome can hold. They’re pumping it miles upriver to two old sand pits.
While at Kings Harbor sample some frozen yogurt or one of the restaurants that recently re-opened. Please support the local merchants who bet their financial futures to make your life a little more enjoyable.
Demolition of Home-Buyout Properties in Forest Cove Scheduled to Begin March 11
Houston City Council Member Dave Martin announced today that Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD) will begin demolition of several home-buyout properties in Forest Cove next week.
The demolition in the Forest Cove Town Home community will begin with units:
HCFCD plans to submit the demolition request for 1050 Marina Drive shortly.
County Completing Buyouts
Currently there are several other units that are almost completely under HCFD’s ownership. When they are completely owned, their demolition will follow.
Martin thanked City of Houston Department of Neighborhoods Director TaKasha Francis for her assistance with expediting the demolition permits.
“These town homes are a constant reminder to the community of the devastation caused by Hurricane Harvey,” said Martin. “HCFCD has done a tremendous job in keeping our office informed on the status of the demolition process for these Hurricane Harvey buyout properties.”
To learn more about HCFCD’s buyout program, visit their website.
Harvey swept away several of the townhomes in this area, leaving nothing but the foundations. Owners of several of the surviving units reported water as high as 17 to 22 feet at the peak of the flood.
A Metamorphosis in the Making
I will cover this story as it develops. I have talked with both Harris County County Precinct 4 Commissioner Jack Cagle and the City of Houston Parks Board about this area. It’s about to undergo a metamorphosis. Within several years, this could become part of beautiful riverfront park that adds new luster to the community, provides a recreational resource to residents, and puts distance between homes and future floods.
Posted by Bob Rehak on March 8, 2019
556 Days since Hurricane Harvey
Seitzinger Contributes Second Study on Harvey, Addressing Timing and Backwater Issues
David Seitzinger, P.E., a Kingwood-based engineer, has contributed another study to the discussion of Hurricane Harvey. He titled the first one, SJR Flooding: Causes, Impacts, Potential Solutions. The second, SJR Flooding: Water Levels, Flows and Timing, does an even deeper, 92-page dive into the data.
Scope and Purpose
Seitzinger states in the opening that flooding cannot be eliminated when you get as much rainfall as we did with Harvey. But then goes on to say that, “There may be ways to limit the flooded areas in future.” His paper is intended to provide a better understanding of what happened. He hopes this will help design remedies that make the area more resilient to flooding.
River Obstructions Creating Backwater Effects
Seitzinger identifies six river obstructions creating backwaters:
He then spends the next 70 pages analyzing what happened at each of these during the flood and developing various strategies to deal with them. He breaks his recommendations up into short- and long-term.
Short-Term Recommendations
Short term recommendations include:
Long-Term Recommendations
Longer-range recommendations for investigation and implementation include:
Limitations of Study
Seitzinger’s presentation is very technical; it is not easy reading. He targets other engineers with this and requests peer review.
One thing that will require validation: his velocity calculations. They seem at odds with velocities reported by rescue workers. I talked to an HPD officer, for instance, who estimated velocity in the vicinity of the West Lake Houston Parkway Bridge at 10 to 20 miles per hour. By calculating peaks as they moved downriver, Seitzinger estimates 1.03 mph. The difference could have to do with water jetting through the bottlenecks that Seitzinger describes. Unequal distribution of rainfall across upstream tributaries could also affect offsets among downstream peaks. Regardless…
Value of Study
Seitzinger provides all the data for others to check his calculations. The main value of an effort like this is that it collects all the crucial data in one place for posterity, cross-examination and comparison.
Kingwood is lucky to have many talented engineers, such as Seitzinger. This should stimulate much discussion.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 3/8/2019
556 Days since Hurricane Harvey
March 4 Dredge Update
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers supplied this graphic. It updates the public on the latest dredging progress.
Two dredges, moving west to east (left to right), expect to complete dredging by the end of April, seven weeks from now. It was originally a nine month project scheduled to end around April 1, but heavy weather and multiple floods during December and January set the contractors back.
Great Lakes Dredge and Dock operates the red dredge that started at River Grove Park and is working its way toward the project midpoint.
Callan Marine operates the blue dredge that started at the midpoint and is working its way toward the end.
With roughly 50 days remaining (about 15-20% of the time depending on how many weather days you allow), the corps appears to be about 70% done. That means they must hustle to make up time. The contractors are already working 24/7.
Parents who want to give their kids a treat can take them down to Kings Harbor to watch the dredging. I was there today. It is truly impressive. There’s lots of big equipment on the river moving more sand than the Astrodome can hold. They’re pumping it miles upriver to two old sand pits.
While at Kings Harbor sample some frozen yogurt or one of the restaurants that recently re-opened. Please support the local merchants who bet their financial futures to make your life a little more enjoyable.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 3/7/2019
555 Days since Hurricane Harvey