Major Projects Questionnaire

Project Information

Agency Name TxDOT Houston District
Project Title IH 10 Inner Katy Reconstruction and Managed Lanes
Facility/Street/Highway IH 10
Limits From IH 610 W to Washington Ave
Description INNER KATY SEG 3: Reconstruct 10 mainlanes and two 3-lane frontage roads. Construct 4 new non-tolled managed lanes and drainage improvements
Timeframe Long Term (More than 10 Years)
Estimated Cost $275,000,000.00

Regional Transportation Plan Goals

According to the 2045 RTP, this project falls under H-GAC’s Manage, Maintain, and Expand strategies, which collectively directly support all five of H-GAC’s goals of improving safety, achieving/maintaining a state of good repair, moving people and goods efficiently, strengthening regional economic competitiveness, and protecting cultural and natural resources. [1] Improve Safety: This project will provide additional capacity to the roadway and reduce primary and secondary crashes caused by congestion. [2] Achieve & Maintain State of Good Repair: In a widening/reconstruction project, old pavement is removed, and new pavement is constructed, thus increasing the state of good repair. [3] Move People and Goods Reliably and Efficiently: This project will reduce congestion and reduce resulting crashes, increasing the reliability of the facility. [4] Strengthen Regional Economic Competitiveness: This project will reduce congestion and resulting crashes, increasing the truck travel time reliability of the facility, boosting regional and economic competitiveness. [5] Conserve and Protect Natural and Cultural Resources: This project will include improved drainage, which will benefit the natural resources abutting the facility. This project will reduce emissions caused by idling and congestion.

Regional Significance

Roadway

Principal Arterial or Higher Functional Class

Potential Crash Reductions

0.291

1.603

Crash rates for this segment are per 100 million VMT. The fatality rate is 0.291, lower than the regional average (1.23), and the serious injury rate is 1.603, lower than the regional average (6.18). The reconstruction of the roadway will provide additional capacity to the roadway and reduce primary and secondary crashes caused by congestion. Managed lanes are vital for reducing congestion and offering drivers more reliable timeframes for getting to their destinations, adjusting lane strategies as needed to maximize roadway efficiency, and improving traffic flow on both the managed and general-purpose lanes. This project will improve frontage roads which will act as an alternative if main lanes are shut down on other facilities, reducing primary and secondary crashes caused by congestion. Drainage improvements will reduce potential flooding and subsequent weather-related crashes. The improvement of pedestrian infrastructure will allow pedestrians to safely use the facility and reduce points of conflicts with vehicles, thus improving the overall safety of the segment. The consolidated crash reduction factor for this project is 143%, as a result of adding lanes to the facility (WC 517), drainage improvements (WC 209), and installing sidewalks (WC 407).

Potential Congestion Reductions

Yes

Rank #7, https://www.txdot.gov/apps/statewide_mapping/StatewidePlanningMap.html (Top 100 Layer)

This project will be reconstructing the frontage roads/shared use paths and main lanes to extend/construct 4 new elevated managed lanes east along IH 10 to address congestion. The segment will be brought up to TxDOT and FHWA safety design standards.

Connectivity to Jobs, Medical Facilities, and Activity Centers

Yes

7,188

No

Yes

This project will be reconstructing the frontage roads and main lanes to extend the 4 managed lanes east along IH 10 to address congestion. This corridor is heavily commercial (with some industrial warehousing/distribution centers) and retail oriented providing thousands of jobs. The METRO Northwest Transit Center and future METRO Elevated BRT Bridge is next to this corridor providing connections to jobs for thousands of people (Including a BRT Station at Washington Avenue/IH 10). Drainage equipment upgrades will be conducted on this corridor segment as well reducing flooding risks.

State of Good Repair

2006 (18 years)

Poor

Segments of the project have pavement in Poor condition, according to TxDOT and FHWA guidelines. In a widening/reconstruction project like this project, pavement is removed and new pavement is constructed, thus increasing the state of good repair and extending the service life of the facility.

Biking and Walking Conditions

Frontage roads will have sidewalks/shared use paths built or reconstructed on them per the recent schematic. Shared use paths provide a low-stress experience for active transportation users, increasing user safety and health while improving regional connectivity. The addition of sidewalks will create transportation alternatives and allow pedestrians greater access to services and improve quality of life.

Impacts to Vulnerable Populations

3,426

6,080

794

648

636

193

10.80

The area surrounding the project segment has a lower low-income population (5.37%) as compared to the regional average of 13.5%. The area surrounding the project segment has a lower minority population (41.13%) as compared to the regional average of 65% minority. Because of its central location in the regional network, the project will produce improvements in mobility and connectivity for vulnerable populations as well as connectivity to schools, medical facilities, and social services for the regional population. As a result of the improvement, vulnerable populations will have increased resilience and evacuation capacity in the event of hazards. According to HGAC’s Regional Resilience Tool, the project segment sits on a facility that is rated as having high vulnerability to flooding and is ranked as moderate criticality for accessing key facilities. The project will increase access to and reliability of transit services for vulnerable populations, who generally rely more on these services.

The area surrounding the project segment has a lower low-income population (5.37%) as compared to the regional average of 13.5%. The area surrounding the project segment has a lower minority population (41.13%) as compared to the regional average of 65% minority. TxDOT’s Environmental Process is designed to ensure compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Executive Order on Environmental Justice. Standard practice is to implement projects that provide user safety and operational efficiency while taking into account environmental quality and impacts to surrounding communities. In practice this means identifying and assessing potential project impacts, then proposing measures to avoid, minimize and/or mitigate disproportionately high and adverse effects to Environmental Justice Populations. For example, the project will improve drainage to ATLAS-14 standards, which will mitigate impacts from added capacity to vulnerable populations.

Hurricane Evacuation Route

No

Yes

IH 10 W connects directly to IH 10 W that is classified as State evacuation route.

Additional Documents

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-Brazoria County-Comm Pct 1 (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-City of Friendswood-Mayor (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-City of Galveston-Mayor (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-City of Pattison - Mayor (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-Port Freeport-Chairman (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-RGM-LOS-Waller County-County Judge (ALL RGM TxDOT Projects).pdf

2023CFP-208 map.png