ReportWire

Tag: Bridgeland

  • Sunterra remains Houston’s top-selling MPC – Houston Agent Magazine

    [ad_1]

    Home sales in the Houston metropolitan area made up nearly 20% of sales on RCLCO Real Estate Consulting’s 2025 Sales Top 50 Master-Planned Communities report, with Sunterra in Katy leading the way.

    Based on total new-home sales closed last year, the community from Land Tejas and Starwood Land ranked No. 5 in the United States, with 1,024 sales. Although that figure was down 23% from 2024, it still made Sunterra the top-selling Houston-area MPC — a title it’s held since sales began in 2022.

    Also in Katy, the Tamarron community from D.R. Horton ranked No. 9 with 974 sales, up 32% year over year, edging out Bridgeland as Houston’s second-ranked MPC. The Howard Hughes community, meanwhile, ranked No. 11 with 812 sales, down 13% year over year.

    Other Houston MPCs in the top 50 were Anniston (No. 12) from Friendswood Development in Katy, with 775 sales; The Grand Prairie (No. 17) from EMBER in Hockley, with 639 sales; Meridiana (No. 24) from Rise Communities in Rosharon, with 527 sales; Sienna (No. 38) from Johnson Development and Toll Brothers in Missouri City, with 432 sales; Elyson (No. 41) from Brookfriend Properties in Katy, with 413 sales; Lago Mar (No. 46) from Land Tejas and Starwood Land in Texas City, with 380 sales; and Jordan Ranch (No. 50) from Johnson Development in Fulshear, with 361 sales.

    [ad_2]

    Emily Marek

    Source link

  • ‘God’s here:’ Tornado tears roof from several homes in neighborhood, miraculously no one hurt

    ‘God’s here:’ Tornado tears roof from several homes in neighborhood, miraculously no one hurt

    [ad_1]

    CYPRESS, Texas – If there’s one word to describe what happened in the Bridgeland neighborhood on Thursday, it would be destruction.

    Several homes in the recently constructed neighborhood in Cypress are questionable to even be repairable.

    On Thursday, an EF-1 tornado eyed up the community, packing a punch that is forcing families to find another place to live for the foreseeable future.

    The winds from the tornado—which peaked well over 100 miles per hour—were strong enough to pick apart houses, throw wooded planks like projectiles, and pierce whatever was in their path.

    Damage from an EF-1 tornado along Longhorn Point Drive in the Bridgeland neighborhood of Cypress, TX on May 18, 2024. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    After the winds calmed, families walked outside to find their homes were destroyed and their roofs missing.

    “We were all in here,” said David White, while showing KPRC 2′s Gage Goulding where he waited out the storm. “Four dogs. Me, my wife and my 16-year-old. We’re sitting on cushions and blankets in here, and it was vibrating, and I was holding on to them. And I was thinking, ‘If this is it, at least we’re going together.’ It was very scary.”

    The White family is one of several that can no longer live in their home.

    Actually, David and his crew managed to escape their safe place just in the nick of time.

    David: “The drywall got wet and collapsed.”

    Gage: “You look at this. You look at the room that you sheltered in, and yet your family’s still here. How lucky do you feel?”

    David: “We count our blessings, because that’s the most important thing.”

    He’s not alone. Two doors down, 16-year-old Alejandro Marrero is also thankful for his guardian angel.

    “You know God’s here,” he said.

    He rode out the tornado in a closet with his mother and grandmother. All walked away without a scratch.

    Alejandro: “I walked outside of the bathroom and then ran into the closet.”

    Gage: “Do you feel lucky to be alive?”

    Alejandro: “Yeah. But I’m also lucky that my mom and grandma and everyone else here is alive.”

    Damage from an EF-1 tornado along Longhorn Point Drive in the Bridgeland neighborhood of Cypress, TX on May 18, 2024. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)

    While some of the families here are left to pick through the pieces, others are already back to normal daily life with their electric back.

    How did their power get turned on so quickly?

    This is likely because the community is newer and has its utility lines buried underground.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Gage Goulding, Oscar Chavez

    Source link