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    Tattered Jeans

    Houston's own secret Garden of Eden: Retired engineer turns an esplanade into a green wonderland

    Katie Oxford
    Aug 4, 2014 | 9:02 am

    Going to the post office has become downright pleasurable. On the way home, I make it a point to turn on Bonnie Brae Boulevard and drive west. The esplanade there, once a turn around place for a train years back, now lays out like a little Garden of Eden. Thanks to Willem Kegge.

    The first time I met Willem, a Dutchman and retired engineer, he was standing in a blanket of marigolds that spread to the curb. I stopped my car. “Are you the gardener of this gorgeous place?” I asked. He beamed. Then, he pointed to his house across the street.

    “Willem can take a broom stick,” Dieter said, “jam it into the ground and it’ll not only grow, it’ll bloom!” Looking around, I believed it.

    Since then, whenever I stop there to appreciate Willem’s work, I’ll run into half a dozen others, passing by to do the same thing. This includes bees, butterflies and birds.

    Recently, I was admiring a bed full of blue dwarf petunias Willem planted when his next-door neighbor walked up. “Willem can take a broom stick,” Dieter said, “jam it into the ground and it’ll not only grow, it’ll bloom!” Looking around, I believed it.

    But, if you ask Willem, he’ll give a lot of the credit to another neighbor, John Andrews, who moved there long before Willem and his wife did two years ago. I haven’t met John yet but, supposedly, folks in the neighborhood call him Johnny Appleseed. John originally planted most of the trees on the esplanade.

    After Willem and his wife moved into their home, Willem started gardening a section of the esplanade. It’s grown in size ever since.

    Today, his neighbors bring him trees, plants, and sometimes money for plant materials. Typically, Willem rescues plants from places that are about to be demolished so he seldom has to purchase any. Moving them, “costs just sweat,” he told me. “I can’t throw good plants away.”

    You’re likely to see Willem rooting around the esplanade almost every morning. “I meet a lot of people stopping by,” he smiled.

    During one of my visits with Willem, an ex-neighbor drove up and stopped his car. “I wish this looked as nice when Shelley and I lived here!” he told Willem.

    For The Love Of Plants

    As Willem and I meandered on through the esplanade, he pointed out a peach tree that puts off sweet and wonderful peaches. His favorite tree, a Japanese Zelkova, makes a nice canopy so that things can grow underneath, he explained.

    If you look closer, you might find other things of interest. My favorites? Three miniature cars that you’d never know were made of concrete unless you picked them up. Willem said that when he put them there, he thought they’d last only a day (meaning, thievery). Maybe, I shouldn’t mention them, I worried. “That’s OK,” Willem said, shrugging his shoulders. “Someone might need them more than me.”

    “The hobby I’m most passionate about is music,” he said. “Of all genres.” Looking down the Bonnie Brae Esplanade you could've fooled me.

    Willem talked about his other hobbies like computers and ancestry.

    “The hobby I’m most passionate about is music,” he said. “Of all genres.”

    Looking down the Bonnie Brae Esplanade, you could’ve fooled me.

    I wondered if Willem had been a gardener all his life.

    “No, I came to gardening thanks to my wife. I learned about it from her,” he said, pausing.

    “When she died last year, our friends wanted to know if they should send flowers or plants.”

    He looked down, opening his hands over two rose bushes planted in her memory.

    “I told them plants of course,” he said.

    Miniature cars made of concrete.

    5. Katie Oxford Willem Kegge garden August 2014 Miniature cars made of concrete
      
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    Miniature cars made of concrete.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    eyes on the road

    5 Houston highways rank among deadliest roads in America, per report

    Amber Heckler
    Jun 12, 2025 | 9:30 am
    I-45 Houston downtown
    Photo courtesy of TXDOT
    I-45 is in the hotseat again.

    Heads up to Houstonians commuting on the city's freeways: Five busy Harris County highways were just deemed among the deadliest roads in the country, with I-45 in Houston ranking as the deadliest road in Texas. That's according to a new study based on the latest National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data.

    The study, commissioned by Santa Ana, California-based company Future Bail Bonds, compared fatal crash data across 96,000 U.S. roads from 2019-2023. The top 150 "deadliest" roads were ranked by the total number of fatal crashes that occurred during the five-year period.

    The No. 1 deadliest road in America is I-15 in San Bernardino County, California, the study found. The interstate, which runs from Southern California to Las Vegas, experienced the highest rate of deadly car crashes from 2019-2023 with 196 crashes.

    For comparison, I-45 in Houston had 88 fatal vehicle wrecks during the same time period to rank as the 16th deadliest U.S. road and No. 1 deadliest in Texas. Considering that tens of thousands of people drive the road every day, a fatal crash is relatively unlikely, but the data underscores the need for drivers to remain aware of their surroundings at all times.

    The crowded highway stretches from Dallas to Galveston, and the I-45 North Freeway earned its own spot on the list as the 124th deadliest U.S. road. I-45N experienced 44 deadly crashes between 2019 and 2023, the report said. I-45's controversial expansion project between downtown Houston and the north Sam Houston Tollway (and portions of connecting freeways) also earned it a new reputation as a "freeway without a future" by the activist group Congress for the New Urbanism.

    Elsewhere in Harris County, I-10 ranked as the 22nd deadliest U.S. highway on the list with 76 fatal crashes during the five-year span. It was dubbed the third most fatal Texas highway, with I-35 in Austin splitting up the two Houston roads as the second deadliest statewide.

    "From 2019 to 2023, motor vehicle crashes claimed 186,284 lives across 96,257 roads in the United States, underscoring the persistent danger on American roadways," the report said.

    Two more Houston highways ranked much farther down the report, but still remained among the top 150 deadliest U.S. roads: FM 1960 ranked 114th on the list with 45 fatal crashes, and I-610 ranked No. 131 with 43 fatal crashes.

    Nine other Texas roads that were deemed the deadliest in America with the highest rates of fatal vehicle crashes from 2019-2023 include:

    • No. 23 – I-30 in Dallas County (76 crashes)
    • No. 27 – I-410 in Bexar County (73 crashes)
    • No. 32 – I-10 in El Paso County (69 crashes)
    • No. 63 – I-20 in Tarrant County (56 crashes)
    • No. 66 – I-820 in Tarrant County (55 crashes)
    • No. 115 – SR-12 in Dallas County (45 crashes)
    • No. 130 – I-35 in Bexar County (43 crashes)
    • No. 132 – I-635 in Dallas County (43 crashes)
    • No. 141 – I-10 in Jefferson County (42 crashes)
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