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Two Lamborghinis crash, one catches fire in northwest Harris County

Two Lamborghinis collided near Highway 99 and Jack Road in Cypress, and one caught fire. No one was hurt, but the wreck renews concern over speeding on the Grand Parkway corridor.

Lisa Park··2 min read
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Two Lamborghinis crash, one catches fire in northwest Harris County
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Two Lamborghinis collided on the feeder road of Highway 99, the Grand Parkway, near Jack Road in Cypress, and one of the cars caught fire, turning a high-end crash into a fresh warning about speed on a corridor already under scrutiny in northwest Harris County.

Cy-Fair Fire Department crews said they arrived to find both vehicles heavily damaged, with one engulfed in flames. Firefighters knocked down the blaze quickly, and no injuries were reported. The scene unfolded near a busy stretch of the Grand Parkway feeder road where drivers often move fast and where collisions can escalate fast, especially when traffic is heavy and spacing is tight.

Officials said the cause of the wreck was still not clear, and no charges had been announced. Investigators had not said whether racing, reckless driving or another factor played a role. The crash involved two Lamborghinis, a detail that drew attention, but the immediate public safety issue was the risk the collision posed to everyone using that roadway.

The location matters for more than the cars involved. Highway 99 has been the focus of recent safety enforcement efforts in Harris County because of growing concerns about crashes and fatalities. That push has centered on dangerous driving behaviors that can turn a routine trip along the Grand Parkway into a serious emergency in seconds.

For Cypress residents and commuters in northwest Harris County, the fire at Jack Road was another reminder that the feeder roads around Highway 99 can be just as hazardous as the main lanes. The Grand Parkway carries steady regional traffic, and when drivers push speed or make aggressive lane changes, the margin for error narrows quickly.

The Texas Department of Transportation maintains crash records from law enforcement reports, data that help shape enforcement and planning across the county. On this corridor, those numbers have already prompted closer attention from local officials as they look for ways to slow dangerous driving and reduce deadly wrecks before the next one turns fiery.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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