Houston Strategies
Thursday, April 02, 2026
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
TXDoT and City of Houston Announce New Coordination on Construction Schedules
In a move that many long-time Houston commuters thought impossible, the Texas Department of Transportation (TXDOT) and the City of Houston Public Works department have finally broken through decades of bureaucratic silos. After years of complaints that the two entities never talk to each other, a new memorandum of understanding (MOU) has been signed to ensure "Total Corridor Synchronization."
The "Aha!" Moment: I-10 and Montrose
The spark for this new partnership came from the recent "pilot program" involving the I-10 bottleneck near downtown. While TXDOT effectively throttled main-lane capacity, the City simultaneously moved forward with extensive utility and surface work on Montrose Blvd—one of the primary relief valves for inner-loop traffic to bypass the new I-10 bottleneck.
"For years, we accidentally made traffic worse by lack of communication," said one anonymous official close to the negotiations. "But during the I-10/Montrose overlap, we saw something magical. By closing the alternative route at the exact same time as the primary freeway, we achieved a level of stasis we’ve never seen. It was a pure, unmoving expression of urban density. We realized that if we actually tried to coordinate, we could do this across the entire county."
The "Alternative Route Elimination Protocol" (AREP)
Under the new "Gridlock Synergy Initiative," the agencies will now share a unified digital dashboard. The software is designed to flag any "unintended escape routes." If TXDOT plans a lane closure on a major highway, the City’s Public Works department is automatically pinged to find the most popular "Waze shortcut" and schedule a water main replacement or a "sidewalk enhancement" for that same window.
Key features of the new coordination process include:
- The Bottleneck Multiplier: A mathematical formula ensuring that if a freeway is reduced to two lanes, the nearest parallel arterial must be reduced to one.
- Dynamic Cone Deployment: A shared pool of orange barrels that can be moved quickly to block any side street that appears to be "flowing too freely."
- The "Nowhere to Run" Guarantee: A commitment to ensure that at any given moment, there is no possible path between the Energy Corridor and Downtown that doesn't involve at least 45 minutes of idling.
Looking Ahead
The agencies are already looking at future "wins." Rumors suggest that as the I-45 North Houston Highway Improvement Project (NHHIP) ramps up, the City is coordinating a massive, multi-year "pothole inspection" of every east-west street between 610 and Beltway 8.
"The old way was chaotic," the official noted. "One day the freeway was closed, the next day the street was closed. It gave commuters hope that tomorrow might be better. Gridlock Synergy eliminates that hope, creating a predictable, permanent state of immobility that finally forces Houstonians to confront the reality of their life choices."
Hope you enjoyed this year's April Fools post ;-D (with a little help from AI)
Previous April Fools Posts:
- 2025: Astrodome to become SpaceX Mission Control & Starship Facility Under Musk Deal!
- 2024: Mayor Whitmire balances city budget without new taxes or a garbage fee
- 2023: TEA to run HISD using Artificial Intelligence
- 2022: TXDoT and Harris County reach deal on 45N NHHIP rebuild
- 2021: Baylor forfeits to UH after positive covid test - UH goes straight to national championship game!
- 2020: NBA playoffs to be held in Houston during April lockdown
- 2019: Mayor Turner and firefighters agree to compromise on Prop B
- 2018: Mayor unveils compliant housing models for new post-Harvey flood elevation regulations
- 2017: City bike plan expanded to include freeways
- 2016: TXDoT responds to Mayor Turner's call to rethink urban transportation and freeways
- 2015: J.J. Watt running for Mayor of Houston
- 2014: HPD forming task force against ride services
- 2013: Astrodome to be restored to host 2017 Super Bowl LI
- 2012: Hobby to close, IAH turned over to United
- 2008: Neighborhood happy with new Ashby tower modifications
- 2007: Mayor expands historic preservation, air pollution initiatives
- 2006: Metro settles Universities/Westpark/Richmond rail alignment
- 2005: Houston embraces "New Weather Urbanism"
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Silver: a precious metal that's a scrap metal in transit lines
| 82 Westheimer | 13,095 |
| 4 Beechnut | 7641 |
| 2 and 402 Bellaire | 6797 |
| 46 Gessner | 6467 |
| 25 Richmond | 6268 |
| 54 Scott | 5924 |
Labels: Metro, mobility strategies, rail, transit
Monday, December 29, 2025
2025 Highlights
Happy New Year! Time for our annual round-up of the best posts of 2025, with this year featuring as many (or more!) great posts from Oscar as from me. If you missed them earlier this year - or just didn't have time to read them then - hopefully the holidays are a more leisurely time for perusal.
These posts have been chosen with a particular focus on significant ideas I'd like to see kept alive for discussion and action, and they're mainly targeted at new readers who want to get caught up with a quick overview of the Houston Strategies landscape. I also like to track what I think of as "reference posts" that sum up a particular topic or argument; and, last but not least, they've also been invaluable for me to track down some of my best thinking for meetings or when requested by others (as is the ever-helpful Google search).
Don't forget we offer an email option for the roughly once/week posts - see the Google Groups subscription signup box at the bottom of the right sidebar. An RSS feed link for newsfeed readers is also available in the right sidebar (I'm a fan of Feedly).
2025 marks 20 years of Houston Strategies! As always, thanks for your readership.
- The $10 Million Mile: How The Boring Company Changes the Transit Equation for Houston
- A (hopefully) momentary lapse of reason at TxDOT
- How Houston can silence those ear-blasting cars and trucks!
- Highways: costs are way up, funding is in decline. What's the Impact on Houston?
- A new seal for the City of Houston
- The Gulfton Fallacy: Don't Let Zoning's 'Perfect' Be the Enemy of Houston's Good
- Metro's 2024 Annual Report: finally heading the right direction
- The best posts from the first 20 years and 2.3 million pageviews
- 2024 Highlights
- 2023 Highlights
- 2022 Highlights
- 2021 Highlights
- 2020 Highlights
- The best posts from the first 15 years and 1.5 million pageviews
- 2019 Highlights
- 2018 Highlights
- 2017 Highlights
- The best posts from the first dozen years and million pageviews
- 2016 Highlights
- 2015 Highlights
- Ten years of Houston Strategies retrospective (March 2015)
- 2014 Highlights
- Best posts of the first 1,000 (February 2014)
- 2013 Highlights
- 5th birthday best-of-the-best retrospective (March 2010, updated thru 2012)
- 2012 Highlights
- 2011 Highlights
- 2010 Highlights
- 2009 Highlights
- 2007 Highlights
- 2005 Highlights
Labels: highlights
Monday, December 01, 2025
The $10 Million Mile: How The Boring Company Changes the Transit Equation for Houston
- Revolutionary Cost Reductions: The Boring Company is driving tunneling costs down from traditional transit's $900M+ per mile to roughly $10-20M per mile today, with a future target as low as $3-4M.
- Superior Service Model: The system offers nonstop, point-to-point travel with virtually zero wait times and high speeds, avoiding the "stop-and-go" inefficiency of traditional buses and trains.
- Scalable Infrastructure: Unlike subways, stations are inexpensive (often <$1M) and can be added continuously without slowing down the main line, supporting capacity up to 90k passengers/hour.
- Houston Potential: While full private funding might be difficult here compared to Vegas, the drastically reduced costs make a public-private partnership highly viable. A network connecting Downtown, the Galleria, and Hobby Airport could be built for a fraction of the cost of the now-suspended University BRT.
Labels: autonomous vehicles, infrastructure, Metro, mobility strategies, transit, tunneling
Saturday, November 15, 2025
A (hopefully) momentary lapse of reason at TxDOT
| Year | Operating Loss millions |
Ridership millions |
Subsidy per boarding | |
| Houston | 2024 | $938.6 | 75.859 | $12.37 |
| Dallas | 2024 | $952.1 | 54.573 | $17.45 |
| Los Angeles | 2023 | $2,639 | 270.179 | $9.77 |
| Company | Model | Top Speed | Range |
| Joby Aviation | S4 | 200 mph | 100 to 150 miles |
| Archer | Midnight | 150 mph | 100 miles |
| Beta | Alia VTOL | 176 mph | (not listed) |
| Beta | Alia CTOL | 176 mph | 387 miles |
Labels: autonomous vehicles, Metro, mobility strategies, rail, transit, transportation plan
Friday, November 07, 2025
How Houston can silence those ear-blasting cars and trucks!
This week the Houston Chronicle published my op-ed calling for noise cameras in Houston (thank you shout out to Evan and Lisa!). I would also like to post it here for posterity. As a resident of Midtown I can't tell you how often I hear cars driving down Bagby with their stereos so loud they rattle windows, even at 2am in the morning! 😠 I really hope the City (as well as Midtown and other TIRZs) strongly consider these noise cameras being used in other parts of the country. The fine revenue will more than cover the cost of the cameras! Please pass along to any officials you know - thank you.
How Houston can silence those ear-blasting cars and trucks
Noise cameras would give police — and residents — a tool to fight back
Anyone living in Midtown or along the Washington Corridor knows the sound. It’s the nightly, window-rattling roar of illegally modified exhausts, blasting stereos, and aggressively revved engines. This isn’t the ambient hum of a vibrant city. It’s an assault on our quality of life, a degradation of our property, and a symptom of growing public disorder.
Or, as Mayor John Whitmire succinctly put it in a recent New York Times article: “Too loud, too loud, too loud!”
The problem is not just anecdotal. It’s a quantifiable crisis. A recent study ranked Houston as the second-loudest city in America (after only Los Angeles). Between September 2022 and May 2025, Houstonians filed over 100,000 noise complaints with the Houston Police Department. HPD’s Central Division, which covers Midtown, saw over 11,000 of those calls, making it one of the city’s worst hotspots.
Our current enforcement model is a demonstrable failure. Residents call 311 or the HPD non-emergency line, but by the time an overstretched officer can respond, the offender is long gone. The result is an enforcement gap where our laws are rendered meaningless. Houston’s Code of Ordinances already prohibits excessively noisy vehicles, but without an effective tool, the ordinance is just ink on paper.
It’s time for a pragmatic, technological solution: automated noise enforcement. As a recent Wall Street Journal report detailed, cities like New York and Newport are successfully deploying “noise cameras.” These devices use a certified microphone paired with a high-definition camera. When a vehicle violates a set decibel limit, the system automatically records the sound level and captures an image of the license plate, allowing the city to mail a citation to the owner.
This is a surgical tool, not a surveillance dragnet. It’s a force multiplier for HPD, allowing officers to focus on more serious crime instead of chasing sonic ghosts.
Critics will inevitably cry foul, mistakenly claiming that Texas banned all automated cameras. This is legally false. The Legislature’s prohibitions are narrowly and precisely written, and only apply to cameras that work in conjunction with traffic-control signals — such as cameras that catch red-light runners — or cameras that enforce the speed limit.
Neither prohibition applies to noise cameras.
A noise camera citation would be for violating Houston’s Chapter 30 noise code — a local quality-of-life issue — not a moving violation under the state’s transportation code. This is a crucial distinction that places noise enforcement squarely within the city’s home-rule authority.
The path forward is the Houston way: a limited, data-driven pilot program. Let’s deploy a handful of these cameras in the worst-offending areas, like Midtown. We can follow New York City’s model, which established a clear noise threshold — 85 decibels, roughly the threshold for safe exposure — and a steep civil penalty structure that starts at $800 to create a real deterrent. The revenue should be dedicated to public safety and traffic-calming infrastructure to prove the goal is peace, not profit.
Restoring tranquility to our urban neighborhoods isn’t an anti-car policy — it’s a pro-Houston policy. It protects the property values of homeowners and the investments of small businesses. It makes our streets more attractive for pedestrians, outdoor dining, and residential life, creating a virtuous cycle of vitality. We have a serious problem and a proven, legal solution. It’s time for City Hall to act.
Labels: quality of place


















