Cy-Fair - Jersey Village Edition | March 2026

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Cy-Fair Jersey Village Edition VOLUME 17, ISSUE 7  MARCH 13 APRIL 13, 2026

2026 Camp Guide

Texans plant roots in Cypress Toro District to generate $34B in economic impact By Sarah Brager 22

Toro District 22 acres for Houston Texans headquarters and training facilities 61 acres of mixed-use development including a Harris County administrative annex SOURCE: HOWARD HUGHES COMMUNITIESŽCOMMUNITY IMPACT

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Designs released Feb. 25 show early plans for the 83-acre sports and entertainment hub located in Bridgeland. (Rendering courtesy Howard Hughes Communities)

MADE FOR YOU.

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See a David Weekley Homes Sales Consultant for details. Prices, plans, dimensions, features, specifications, materials, and availability of homes or communities are subject to change without notice or obligation. Illustrations are artist’s depictions only and may differ from completed improvements. Copyright © 2025 David Weekley Homes – All Rights Reserved. Houston, TX (HOU-25-005453)

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

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CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Welcome to care that gets better with age.

As your resource for senior-focused healthcare, Kelsey-Seybold for Seniors can help ensure you receive quality, proactive, coordinated care that understands your changing health needs. There are several ways to learn about your Medicare coverage options, you can review resources from Medicare, contact Medicare Advantage health plans directly, or speak with a licensed insurance agent.* 713-442-8526 (TTY: 711) Choose your Kelsey-Seybold provider today! Calling this number will connect you to a licensed insurance agent.

seniors.kelsey-seybold.com

*There are several ways to learn about your Medicare coverage options. You can review the CMS website at medicare.gov or call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227/TTY call 1-877-486-2048), 24 hours a day/7 days a week. You can contact Medicare Advantage health plans directly for information about the plans they offer. Another option is to speak with a licensed insurance agent. Kelsey-Seybold Clinic accepts patients with Medicare Advantage plans. Not all plans accepted. Call for details. © 2026 Kelsey-Seybold Clinic. All rights reserved. KSSCIM_1087

4

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

About Community Impact

Community Roots: Founded in 2005 by John and Jennifer Garrett, we remain a locally owned business today. Texas-Wide Reach: We deliver trusted news to 75+ communities across the Austin, Bryan-College Station, Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth and San Antonio metros.

Market leaders & metro team

Reporters Jovanna Aguilar Angela Bonilla Sarah Brager Karley Cross Bradley Dountz Wesley Gardner Cole Gee Rachel Leland Emily Lincke Roo Moody Tomer Ronen

Angie Thomas General Manager athomas@ communityimpact.com

Nichaela Shaheen Catherine White Kara Willis Ariel Worthy Graphic Designers Richard Galvan Ellen Jackson Matt Mills

Jake Schlesinger Jesus Verastegui Ronald Winters Managing Editor James T. Norman Product Manager Martha Risinger Quality Desk Editor Sarah Hernandez Houston Market President Jason Culpepper

Jessica Shorten Editor jshorten@ communityimpact.com

Andrew Henry Account Executive ahenry@ communityimpact.com

Contact us

16300 Northwest Freeway, Jersey Village, TX 77040 • 281›469›6181 Careers communityimpact.com/careers Press releases cyfnews@communityimpact.com Advertising cyfads@communityimpact.com communityimpact.com/advertising

We've teamed up to bring you more of the stories you care about.

© 2026 Community Impact Co. All rights reserved. No reproduction of any portion of this issue is allowed without written permission from the publisher.

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CY›FAIR › JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Impacts

4 Gomez Western Wear Gomez Western Wear has 20 locations in Texas. With boots handmade in Mexico, the western store oers a variety of western boots, ankle boots and work boots for men, women and children. • Opened in January • 25414 Hwy. 290, Cypress • www.gomezwesternwear.com 5 Falooda Fiesta Falooda Fiesta plans to oer over 15 street food options and 50 ice cream variations made in house. Menu items oered include artisan paletas, milkshakes and a variety of Indian street food options including samosas and wraps. • Opened March 7 • 8931 Fry Road, Ste. 600, Cypress • www.falooda–iesta.com 6 Seoulside Wings Specializing in Korean wings, Seoulside Wings oers several wing ˜avors including soy garlic, lemon pepper, garlic parmesan, bualo and spicy Korean rice cake ˜avor. Other items on the menu include Korean barbecue rice bowls and Korean corn dogs. • Opened Feb. 16 • 17452 Hwy. 290, Jersey Village • www.seoulsidewings.com 7 Vegas Texas Casino Vegas Texas Casino is a practice-style casino where guests can enjoy classic casino-style entertainment. Games oered include blackjack, baccarat, roulette, craps and a variety of skill-based and sweepstakes slot machines. • Opened Feb. 17 8 Villa Neri Pizzeria Villa Neri Pizzeria oers a variety of pizzas. The eatery also oers the Neri Pizza made with pepperoni, Canadian bacon, ground beef, onions, bell peppers, mushrooms, black and green olives. • Opened December • 13012 FM 529, Houston • Instagram: Villa Neri • 12810 Telge Road, Cypress • www.vegastexascasino.com

G R A N T

249

CHAMPION FOREST DR.

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18

L O U E T T

ARDFIELD DR.

RIO MEDINA TRL.

20

4

16

J

13

BRETON RIDGE ST.

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WILLOWBROOK MALL

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14

290

10

15

CYPRESS N. HOUSTON RD.

BRIDGELAND CREEK PKWY.

9 11

1960

2 3

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1

GREENHOUSE RD.

ELYSON EXCHANGE WAY

L O

6

8

17

FRY RD.

12 19

529

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MAP NOT TO SCALE

N TM; © 2026 COMMUNITY IMPACT CO. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

comprehensive eye exams, LASIK evaluation and treatments for dry eyes and glaucoma. • Opened Feb. 2 • 20725 Tuckerton Road, Ste. 500, Cypress • www.cypressvisionopto.com 3 Einstein Bros. Bagels Bagels and breakfast spot Einstein Bros. Bagels specializes in a variety of breakfast and lunch sandwiches, bagels and treats alongside coee. • Opened March 2 • 20725 Tuckerton Road, Ste. 400, Cypress • www.einsteinbros.com

Now open

1 Beauty Empire Super Center Beauty Empire Super Center oers several beauty products from NYX makeup products to hair care. The beauty supply store also oers hair extensions, braids, lashes and hair growth products. • Opened Jan. 31 • 9520 Jones Road, Houston • Instagram: beautyempiresupercenter

2 Cypress Vision Optometry The new clinic will oer eye care services such as

6

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY COMMUNITY IMPACT STAFF

9 VEVOR VEVOR is a home improvement brand oering over 20,000 products including hardware products, building materials, appliances, outdoor tools and furniture.

14 Galiana’s O¦cials with Tex-Mex restaurant Galiana’s announced the Cypress location will be relocating to the Towne Lake area. The restaurant specializes in providing a variety of tamales, empanadas, fajitas alongside a full bar. • Opening summer 2026 • Intersection of Greenhouse Road and Cypress North Houston Road • www.galianastexmex.com 15 JETSET Pilates JETSET specializes in 50-minute pilates-style conditioning classes on a reformer machine with a focus on strength, ˜exibility and endurance. • Estimated opening spring 2026 • 20115 Bridgeland Creek Parkway, Cypress • www.jetsetpilates.com 16 Taco Palenque Taco Palenque oers a variety of tacos, burritos and fajita plates with beef or chicken. The restaurant also oers “Palenque bowls” which include beef or chicken, Mexican rice and charro beans. • Opening late 2026

Now open

• Opened early February • 10951 FM 1960, Houston • www.vevor.com

10 Artisan Bread Gallery Artisan Bread Gallery oers handcrafted European sourdough breads made from scratch with no preservative. Bread oered ranges from French baguettes, jalapeño bread, cranberry raisin walnut bread and rosemary focaccia. • Opened March 2 • 10602 FM 1960, Houston • Facebook: Artisan Bread Gallery

19 MilkShake Factory The dessert shop oers a variety of gourmet handspun milkshakes, with ˜avors including Camp¢re S’mores, Bananas Foster and Caramel Toee Cappuccino as well as classics like chocolate and vanilla, per its website. • Opened Feb. 9 • 7040 Elyson Exchange Way, Ste. 100, Cypress • www.milkshakefactory.com

Coming soon

11 Acacia Int’l Grocery Bakery & Halal Meat Per o¦cials, the new location will oer international grocery items, fresh halal meat, and bakery products. • Opening TBD • 10937 FM 1960, Houston • www.acaciamart.com 12 Coco Crepes & Co ee Coco Crepes & Coee serves a variety of sweet and savory and wa¨es, as well as paninis, soups and salads. • Estimated opening late summer • 7040 Elyson Exchange Way, Ste. 400, Cypress • www.cococrepes.com 13 Del Webb Bridgeland The 190-acre gated community will include 672 homes in close proximity to parks, trails and Bridgeland’s growing retail district, per the news release. Residents will also have access to a resort-style amenity center. • Model homes by fall 2026 • Intersection of Rio Medina Trail and Jack Road, Cypress • www.delwebb.com

• 26003 Hwy. 290, Cypress • www.tacopalenque.com

What's next PERMITS FILED WITH THE TEXAS

DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION

17 Memorial Hermann Primary Care The new facility will cost $1.3 million and is expected to start construction in May. The facility will provide primary and specialist care including cardiologists, OB/GYN services and sports medicine. • 7070 Elyson Exchange Way, Bldg. L, Cypress • www.memorialhermann.com 18 PAM Health PAM Health is a nationwide hospital system focused on providing rehabilitative services for a variety of complex medical issues. The 62,200-square-foot facility will house 52 patient beds. • Opening late 2027 • 22203 Cypresswood Drive, Cypress • www.pamhealth.com

In the news

20 Aristoi Classical Academy Aristoi Classical Academy is a tuition-free charter school serving the Cy-Fair area. The new 59,538-square- foot building will house all grade levels in the new,

permanent facility. • Opening fall 2026 • 13631 Ard–ield Drive, Houston • www.aristoiclassical.org

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CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

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Government

BY SARAH BRAGER & MELISSA ENAJE

Harris County advances countywide road ood warning system Harris County roadways are one step closer to seeing a new countywide road ood warning system to detect roadway ooding in real time and alert drivers. Explained A motion to advance negotiations with local engineering €rm J.M. Torres and Associates LLC passed unanimously at the Jan. 29 Harris County Commissioners Court meeting. The Houston- based €rm creates real-time ood intelligence alert systems and data collectors, according to the business’s website. “The project will install seven emergency ood warning measures across the four precincts,” Harris County Precinct 2 media specialist Alonzo Guadarrama said in an email. “These systems will

Erica Lee Carter new county administrator Former U.S. Rep. Erica Lee Carter will begin serving as the new Harris County administrator starting March 9. The details Carter will lead the Oce of County Administration, or OCA, which oversees the day-to-day operations of the county. “I know that I must maintain your trust, condence and respect to execute the vision and directives of the Commissioners Court.”

Cypress-Fairbanks area ooding risks Moderate Severe Minor Major

Residential Commercial

Roads

77040

77064

77065

77070

77095

77429 77433

SOURCES: FIRST STREET, HARRIS COUNTY FLOOD CONTROL DISTRICT COMMUNITY IMPACT

be able to detect roadway ooding in real time and alert drivers, improving safety and helping reduce the risk of ood-related accidents.” At least 812,294 properties in Harris County, or nearly 58% of all properties, have a risk of ooding over the next 30 years, according to data compiled from nonpro€t First Street.

ERICA LEE CARTER, HARRIS COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR

2025 Property Tax Results Are In

Market Value Band: $250K-$500K

$310 Traditional Firms

Ownwell vs. traditional firms in Harris County. The numbers don’t lie. Scan to save more with Ownwell.

$228

Data as of January, 2026. Full methodology: https://www.ownwell.com/results/texas-property-tax-protest-results-agent-performance

9

CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Our care experience will feel different – because it is. We specialize in primary care for adults over 65 and work with you to create a personalized Stay Well Care Plan to help you get well and stay well.

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Government

BY SARAH BRAGER

Cy-Fair, Cypress areas growing west

as trends in income, education and health, among others. This data compares with the 2019 ACS survey results, which analyzed communities across the nation between 2015-2019. The population in the 77433 ZIP code grew notably as master-planned communities near the Grand Parkway, such as Bridgeland and Elyson, have added thousands of new homes to the western region. In comparison, ZIP codes east of Hwy. 6 saw less residential growth, with 77095 as the only ZIP code to decline since 2020.

Cypress continues to welcome more residents as people are moving to rapidly-developing neighborhoods near the Grand Parkway, recently released federal data shows. The U.S. Census Bureau released new 5-year data for 2024 on Jan. 29 as part of its American

Communities Survey, or ACS, which estimates population changes across the country between 2020-2024. ACS results provide a snapshot of over 40 categories of statistics to show how local communities shifted in the past ‡ve years, such

Cypress-Fairbanks ZIP codes

2019

2024

Local demographics*

48.81%

17.04%

Black or African American White Hispanic or Latino

Two or more races American Indian or Alaskan Native Native Hawaiian or other Pacic Islander

249

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29.65%

290

77070

1960

77429

Asian

77064

12.4% 9.36%

77433

26.91%

2019 total population: 437,287 2024 total population: 480,374

2.31%

529

77040

12.99% 8.54%

31%

77065

77095

0.8%

*ALL CATEGORIES LISTED ARE RACES, EXCEPT FOR HISPANIC OR LATINO, WHICH IS NOT A RACE. HOWEVER, THE PERCENTAGES OF THE RACES LISTED DO NOT INCLUDE HISPANIC OR LATINO RESIDENTS.

0.06% 0.38%

N

0.04%

Population change

Residents without health insurance

2019

2024

+31.5%

120K

ZIP code

2019 7.1% 8.9% 9.5%

2024 8.2% 10.2% 11.2%

+ 6.26%

77429 77433 77095 77065 77070 77064 77040

100K

-1.3%

80K

+ 9.75%

+6.59%

+1.96%

60K

+2.99%

15.5% 13.4% 17.3% 20.3%

15% 16%

40K

20K

18.3% 20.6%

0

77433

77429

77095

77065

77070

77064

77040

Median household income +27.97%

2019 2024

Education level** High school diploma or higher achieved

Bachelor’s degree or higher achieved 2019 2024

$150K

+11.36%

$125K

0.68%

88.33%

88.28%

$100K

+13.8%

+30.18%

+30.04%

+9.375%

$75K

$50K

37.37%

38.47%

$25K

$0

77433

77429

77095

77065

77070

77064

77040

SOURCES: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU 2019 AND 2024 AMERICAN COMMUNITY SURVEY 5˜YEAR ESTIMATES™COMMUNITY IMPACT NOTE: INCOME REFLECTS INFLATION˜ADJUSTED DOLLARS

**BASED ON TOTAL POPULATION AGE 25 AND OLDER

11

CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

You deserve more than a service - you deserve a calling

We are your Jersey Village neighbors, rooted in this community, guided by Christian values, and committed to walking with families through life’s most sacred moments.

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12

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Education

BY SARAH BRAGER

Cy-Fair ISD will not pursue a bond referendum in May after Harris County ocials said they could not support the district with election resources, Superintendent Doug Killian said Feb. 5. Killian made the announcement after CFISD’s Long Range Planning Committee recommended the district send a $1.64 billion bond to voters for approval in 2026 to support infrastructure improvements, vehicle replacements and technology investments. The committee was prepared to let the board select a May 2 or Nov. 3 election, the two uniform 2026 bond election dates in Texas. However, Harris County ocials informed CFISD the county would not be entering agreements with local political subdivisions for May 2 elections, the County Clerk’s Oce conŽrmed with Community Impact , meaning a May election is o‘ the table. Cy-Fair ISD bond election delayed

Life of Cy-Fair ISD vehicle inventory

Breaking it down

School buses

White eet*

Multi-purpose vehicles

Composed of a wide range of district stake- holders, the committee based its proposal o a months-long evaluation of the CFISD’s infrastruc- ture, enrollment, campus quality and eet life. High-priority investments include vehicle replacements, athletic facility upgrades, radio system improvements and renovations to ne arts buildings, among others, according to a Feb. 5 presentation to the board of trustees. The committee condensed its initial proposal from a six-year plan to ve years, saving the district approximately $83.4 million in inationary costs, according to district documents. However, Killian said by pushing the bond election to November and further delaying projects and purchases, the district may lose those savings. LRPC Co-Chair Anya Lucas told the board that committee members ensured the proposal was strictly needs-based and reected cost-saving measures. “When you think about education and you think about taking care of things, there’s a cost to everything we do in our lives,” Lucas said.

Number of vehicles

Less than 5 years old

565

123

14

5-9 years old

345

273

16

$82.2M school bus upgrades $10.9M white eet/MPV upgrades $2.34M transportation safety and security upgrades

10-14 years old 10

154

48

15+ years old 9

136

*REFERS TO NON–BUS SUPPORT VEHICLES SOURCE: LONG RANGE PLANNING COMMITTEE—COMMUNITY IMPACT

Proposed ballot propositions The committee split its bond proposal into four potential ballot propositions:

Diving in deeper

conducting multiple elections within a com- pressed time frame, which places signicant demands on sta”ng, voting equipment, logistics and polling locations,” a statement to Community Impact reads. CFISD Director of General Administration Scott Tucker said self-administering a May 2 election would cost the district approximately $1.4 million. In comparison, CFISD’s election costs have histori- cally ranged from about $250,000-$760,000 when supported by the county, he said.

The Harris County Clerk’s O”ce said 2026 has been “unusually demanding,” having administered a January special election for Texas’ 18th Congressional District and March 3 Democratic and Republican primary elections. The o”ce is statutorily obligated to support primary elections and the May 26 runos. As a result, the County Clerk’s o”ce said it does not have the operational capacity to “responsibly or compliantly” support other local elections in May. “The o”ce is currently responsible for

$1.3B: critical infrastructure, safety and security, technology infrastructure and transportation $256M: instructional technology $60.8M: athletics $20.125M: pools

Total: $1.64B

NOTE: VALUES HAVE BEEN ROUNDED SOURCE: LONG RANGE PLANNING COMMITTEE™COMMUNITY IMPACT

CFISD bond history past 25 years

What’s next?

2001 $470M

are subject to change pending potential adjustments for in ationary costs.

CFISD ocials intend to revisit the bond proposal for a potential November election. The deadline for the board to call a Nov. 3 bond election is Aug. 17, per the secretary of state’s website. Board President Julie Hinaman recommended trustees discuss the proposal during their June meetings, rather than waiting until mid-August to revisit the bond. The board does not meet in July. District ocials said details in the bond proposal

2004 $713.2M

2007 $807M

“It’s just the element of wanting to make sure that we can maximize the opportunity for our voters in CFISD to have the ability to cast their votes on issues that are important to the district,” Tucker told Community Impact. “When we partner with the county, we have greater exibility to allow opportunities for voters to do that.”

2014 $1.2B

2019 $1.762B

2026* $1.34B

*PROPOSED SOURCE: CY–FAIR ISD—COMMUNITY IMPACT

13

CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

The future of heart care is here. At St. Luke’s Health, we understand the extraordinary power of the human heart – not just to beat, but to heal. That’s why we’re dedicated to a future where every heart has

the chance to thrive, oering our patients the most advanced treatments and breakthrough innovations, from a leading team of board-certied heart experts.

Everything we do at St. Luke’s Health; we do to shape the future of heart care.

Care that’s there with you, every beat of the way.

Learn more at care.commonspirit.org/stlukes-health-heart .

14

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Transportation

BY JESSICA SHORTEN

• Timeline: 2026 • Cost: TBD • Funding source: Harris County Precinct 3

Upcoming projects

3

1 Cypress Creek Estates Subdivision improvements Project: This project will provide drainage improvements and pavement reconstruction for increased drainage capacity and reduced ood risk. Update: Funding for this project has been approved. • Timeline: fourth quarter 2026 • Cost: $10.1 million • Funding sources: federal grant managed by Harris County Engineering Department 2 Cypress North Houston Road Project: This project will widen Cypress North Houston Road from a two- to four-lane concrete boulevard with raised medians and underground storm sewer system.

249

Ongoing projects

4 Barwood subdivision improvements Project: This project will provide drainage improvements and pavement reconstruction throughout the subdivision to increase drainage capacity, reduce ood risk and reduce long term maintenance costs. Update: This project has entered the construction phase according to Harris County Precinct 3 o‹cials. • Timeline: estimated completion second quarter 2026 • Cost: $1.1 million • Funding sources: Community Development Block Grant, Harris County 5 Tower Oaks Meadows subdivision drainage improvements Project: This project will provide drainage and ditch improvements throughout the subdivision. Update: Construction work is underway with completion estimated for 2026. • Timeline: estimated completion by mid-2026 • Cost: $18.8 million • Funding source: Harris County Precinct 3

L O U E T T

Cypress Creek Estates

AUTUMN MILLS RD.

2

1

O U S T O N

4

Y

MISTY MOSS LN.

Barwood Tower Oaks Meadows

Update: This project is in the design phase • Timeline: design „inalized by early 2026 • Cost: $16 million

5

• Funding source: Harris County 3 Grant Road widening

1960

A L

Project: This project will widen the road from a two- lane road to four-lane boulevard from Telge Road to Shaw Road. Update: The project is in the design phase.

6

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MAP NOT TO SCALE

home Guide Coming Soon! Community Impact’s

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15

CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Events

BY JOVANNA AGUILAR

• Berry Center, 8877 Barker Cypress Road, Cypress • www.berrycenter.cžisd.net

• Sam Houston Park, 7575 N. Sam Houston Parkway, Houston • www.shrp.com Cy-Fair Home & Outdoor Living Show The 19th annual Cy-Fair Home & Outdoor Living Show will include over 100 exhibitors with home improvement vendors from windows, doors, spas, patios, landscaping and remodeling contractors. • March 21, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., March 22, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. • Free (admission) • Berry Center, 8877 Barker Cypress Road, Cypress • www.texwoodshows.com Children’s Entrepreneur Market Shop at the Children's Entrepreneur Market while supporting a program that teaches young people about entrepreneurship and leadership. • March 21, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. • Free (admission) • Berry Center 8877 Barker Cypress Road, Cypress • www.kidsmarkets.com Adam J. Skinner Golf Tournament 2026 The annual golf tournament bene›ts the Adam J. Skinner Memorial Scholarship of the Cy-Fair Educational Foundation. The scholarship was created in honor of Adam Skinner, a 12 year old who was killed in a car

accident in July 1999. • March 30, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. • TBD • Northgate Country Club, 17110 Northgate Forest Drive, Houston • www.cyfairchamber.com

March

Auto Swap Meet Traders Village is holding its annual auto swap meet featuring hundreds of swap meet dealers on hand with parts and accessories, plus all types of classic and antique cars and trucks on display and for sale. • March 14, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. • $6 (parking) • Traders Village, 7979 N. Eldridge Parkway, Houston • www.tradersvillage.com St. Patrick’s Day & Dollar Day The Sam Houston Race Park is holding a St. Patrick’s Day themed horse racing event featuring green beer and entertainment. • March 14, 1 p.m. • $1 • Sam Houston Park, 7575 N. Sam Houston Parkway, Houston • www.shrp.com LOVB Houston vs Atlanta Attendees are invited to enjoy a volleyball game featuring LOVB Houston vs Atlanta at the Berry Center. • March 14, 5 p.m. • $39 plus (admission)

Astronaut Run Sam Houston Race Park’s fourth annual Astronaut Run will feature 10 contestants who will compete for the Astronaut trophy. • March 20, 4:30 p.m. • $5 (admission) • Sam Houston Park, 7575 N. Sam Houston Parkway, Houston • www.shrp.com Farmers Market The Farmers Market returns to The Boardwalk at Towne Lake featuring vendors with fresh produce and live music. • March 21, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. • Free (admission) • 9945 Barker Cypress Road, Cypress • www.boardwalktl.com Texas Champions Day And 3rd Annual Horsepower & Brews Honoring ›rst responders, military and Texas Racing, the Texas Champions Day will feature a classic car show, a stein holding competition, yard games and car trivia.

April

Sling Experience Traders Village is holding an event featuring a showcase of everything Slingshot lifestyle including group rides, competitions, giveaways and a parade. • April 10-12, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. • $6 (admission) • Sam Houston Park, 7575 N. Sam Houston Parkway, Houston • www.shrp.com Newsies Jr Playhouse 1960 is presenting Newsies Jr, a 1992 live-action musical based on the true New York City newsboys’ strike of 1899. • April 11, 3 and 7 p.m.; April 12, 3 p.m.; April 18, 3 and 7

Superintendent’s Fun Run The 12th annual Superintendent’s Fun Run features a 5K through Towne Lake and Lone Star College Cy-Fair, a 1-mile family friendly course, live student performances, a kids zone, food trucks and vendors.

• March 28, 8-11 a.m. • $10-$27 (admission) • Berry Center, 8877 Barker Cypress Road, Cypress • www.cžisd.net

p.m.; April 19, 3 p.m. • $12-$15 (admission) • 6814 Gant Road, Houston • www.playhouse1960.com

• March 21, noon • $7 (admission)

HUFFMEISTER 8945 Hwy 6 N (281) 859-5879 SPRING CYPRESS 22508 Hwy 249 (281) 379-7383

BARKER CYPRESS 17996 FM 529 (281) 656-4200 JONES ROAD 17414 NW Fwy (713) 983-8827

Community

Camp Guide

2026

Adventure Camp Type: academics, arts, sports Ages: 5-15 Dates: June 1-Aug. 7 Cost: $225 per week; $45 registration fee • D. Bradley McWilliams YMCA at Cypress Creek, 19915 Hwy. 249, Houston • www.ymcahouston.org Alodia Basketball Academy Type: sports Ages: kindergarten-eighth grade Dates: May 26 - August 13 Cost: $155 per week (half-day), $245 per week (full day) • The Den Sports Facility, 17120 House Hahl Road, Cypress; Salem Lutheran Church, 22601 Lutheran Church Road, Tomball • www.alodiacamps.com

Camp Invention Type: academics, arts Ages: entering grades K-9 (registration limited to Christ the Redeemer attendees) Dates: July 7-11 Cost: $285 • Christ the Redeemer Catholic Church, 11511 Huffmeister Road, Houston • www.invent.org Cantu’s Jiu-Jitsu Self-Defense Summer Camp Type: sports Ages: 5-14 Dates: June 15-18 and July 20-23 Cost: $125 per week • 8674 Hwy. 6 N., Houston • www.cantuselfdefense.com CFISD Diving Camp Type: sports, swimming Ages: grades 1-12 Dates: June 16-20 (grades 1-5); July 14-17 (grades 6-8);

Dates: June 1-5, June 15-19 Cost: $500 (register before April 1); $550 (register after April 1); $135 (single day) • 12751 N. Eldridge Parkway, Cypress • www.callegarihorses.com

Camp Cook Type: culinary Ages: 10 and up

Dates: June 1-July 29 Cost: $55-$75 per class • 20631 Behrens Pass Lane, Cypress • www.camp-cook.org

Camp Hope Type: church based camp Ages: completed grades K-6

Dates: June 8-12, June 15-19, and June 22-26 Cost: $95 per week ($90 per week per additional sibling) • Messiah Lutheran Church, 11522 Telge Road, Cypress • www.messiahlc.org

Callegari Equestrian Summer Camp Type: horse riding Ages: 6 and up

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18

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY JOVANNA AGUILAR & JESSICA SHORTEN

Chrysalis Preschool Summer Camp Type: academics Ages: 0-12 Dates: June 3-July 24 Cost: varies based on selection • Chrysalis Christian Preschool, 11522 Telge Road Cypress • www.chrysalischildren.org Cookin’ with Kim Type: Culinary arts Ages: Kindergarten-adults Dates: June-July Cost: $40-$125 single, multi-day and weekly series classes • 15818 Mueschke Road, Cypress • www.cookinwithkim.com Creator Camp Type: academics, arts Ages: 6-13 Dates: June 2-July 25 Cost: $159-$178 (two-day camps), $238-$269 (three- day camps) • The HUB, 12903 Jones Road, Houston • www.creatorcamp.org

Aug. 5-8 (grade 9-12) Cost: $30 (grades 1-8); free (grades 9-12) • 12550 B Windfern Road, Houston • www.c™isd.net CFISD Summer Music Camps Type: arts Ages: grades 8-11 Dates: June 9-11 Cost: free for students • 7909 Fry Road, Cypress • www.c™isd.net/academics/™ine-arts

Cypress

CFISD Club Rewind Type: academic Ages: grades K-6 Dates: June 8-July 16 Cost: $145-$175 per week • 11521 Telge Road, Cypress • www.c™isd.net

Drama Kids of NW Houston Adventures on High Seas Type: arts Ages: 5-8 Dates: June 29-July 3 Cost: $299 • St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, 15415 N Eldridge Parkway, Cypress (June 29-July 3), Good Shepherd Church, 20155 Cypresswood Drive, Cypress (Dates TBD) • www.dramakids.com/cypress-spring-tomball-tx

CFISD Camp Captivate Type: academic Ages: grades K-8 Dates: June 15-18, June 22-25, July 6-9, July 13-16 Cost: $170 per week • 17100 Robison Woods Road, Cypress • www.c™isd.net

CONTINUED ON 20

REGISTRATION NOW OPEN!

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19

CY FAIR JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Community

Drama Kids of NW Houston Descendants Type: arts Ages: 7-12 Dates: June 1-July17 Cost: $299 per week • St. Mary’s Episcopal, 15415 N. Eldridge Parkway, Cypress (June 1-5); West Houston Church, 17100 West Road, Houston (June 15-19); Elyson Community, 23623 Elyson Falls Drive, Katy (July 13-17) • www.dramakids.com/cypress-spring-tomball-tx

Cypress • www.dramakids.com/cypress-spring-tomball-tx

CONTINUED FROM 19

Cypress Academy Blackhorse Type: day / sports Ages: 4-14 Dates: June 8-12, June 22-26, July 13-17, Aug. 3-7 Cost: $235 weekly (by May 15) • 16710 House & Hahl Road, Cypress • www.cypressacademy.com/summer-camps Cypress Academy Hu meister Type: day / sports Ages: 4-14 Dates: June 1-5, June 15-19, June 22-26, July 13-17, July 27-31, Aug. 3-7 Cost: $235 weekly (by May 15) • 11707 Huffmeister Road, Houston • www.cypressacademy.com/summer-camps Drama Kids of NW Houston Spotlight Eras Full Day Summer Camp Type: arts Ages: 7-12 Dates: June 8-12 Cost: $299 • Good Shepherd Church, 20155 Cypresswood Drive, Cypress (June 8-12) • www.dramakids.com/cypress-spring-tomball-tx

Explorers Learning Center Magical Mayhem Type: academic, arts Ages: grades K-6 Dates: June 1-Aug.17 Cost: $143-$298 weekly

• 15255 N. Eldridge Parkway, Cypress • www.explorerslearningcenter.com

Drama Kids of NW Houston Galactic Adventures

Katy Art School Type: arts Ages: 5-12 Dates: June 1-July 30 Cost: $200 per week KidCreate Studio Type: arts, science Ages: 3-12

Type: arts Ages: 7-12

Dates: June 1-Aug. 7 Cost: $299 per week

• Elyson Community, 23623 Elyson Falls Drive, Katy (June 1-5), St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, 13131 Fry Road, Cypress (July 6- July 10), West Houston Church, 17100 West Road, Houston (Aug. 3-Aug. 7) • www.dramakids.com/cypress-spring-tomball-tx Drama Kids of NW Houston Camp Rock Type: arts Ages: 9-15 Dates: July 20-31 Cost: $589 • Good Shepherd Church, 20155 Cypresswood Drive,

Dates: May 25-Aug. 22 Cost: varies per week • 20049 House Hahl Road, Ste. 301, Cypress • www.kidcreate.com

KidStrong Cypress Type: sports Ages: 4-10

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY JOVANNA AGUILAR & JESSICA SHORTEN

Playhouse 1960 Wizard of OZ youth Type: arts Ages: 5-16 Dates: June 1-July 12 Cost: TBD

Dates: through Aug. 9 Cost: $70 per day • 14041 Grant Road, Ste. 140, Cypress • www.kidstrong.com/camp

Cypress

Kidtastic Park Drop-O Camp Type: arts Ages: 5-10 Dates: June 1-5; July 20-24; Aug. 3-7 Cost $30 (daily, half day); $45 (daily, full day); $125 (weekly, half days) $225 (weekly, full days) • 25410 Hwy. 290, Ste. B-8, Houston • www.kidtasticpark.com Kidtastic Park Arts and Crafts Camp Type: arts, science Ages: 5-10 Dates: June 15-19, July 6-10 Cost $220 per week • 25410 Hwy. 290, Ste. B-8, Houston • www.kidtasticpark.com Kidventure St. Ambrose Type: arts, sports Ages: 3-11 Dates: June 2-18 Cost: $360 per week • 4213 Mangum Road, Houston • www.kidventure.com/houston-summer-camps

6814 Gant Road, Houston • www.playhouse1960.com

School of Rock Type: arts Ages: 6-18

Dates: June 23-Aug. 4 Cost: $450 per week • 12904 Fry Road, Ste. 300, Cypress • www.schoolofrock.com/locations/cypress

Sew Houston Type: arts

The Little Gym of Cypress Type: sports Ages: 3-8 (must be bathroom independent) Dates: June 2-Aug. 8 Cost: $45 per day, $180 (™ve-day pass) • 25282 Hwy. 290, Ste. 155, Cypress • www.thelittlegym.com/texas-cypress

Ages: 6 and up (beginner camp), 10-16 (fashion camp) Dates: June 8-11, July 6-9, Aug. 3-6 (beginner camp), June 22-25, July 20-23, Aug. 3-6 (teens and tweens) Cost: $250+ fabric for projects • 7710 Cherry Park Drive, Ste. F, Houston • www.sewhouston.com

This list is not comprehensive.

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21

CY FAIR JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

Texans plant roots in Cypress From the cover

The big picture

An 83-acre sports and entertainment hub called the Toro District is coming to the Bridgeland community by 2029 as part of a public-private partnership between the Houston Texans, Howard Hughes Communities and Harris County. The Texans will construct a 175,000-square-foot headquarters with training facilities, administrative space and a ƒeldhouse, o„cials announced Feb. 25. Texans President Mike Tomon told Community Impact the NFL franchise has been looking to build an o‹-site headquarters for years, moving non-gameday operations from NRG Stadium in Houston’s Inner Loop. “The idea of coming together and having our headquarters [and] training facility, and doing it in a mixed-use environment, we really felt could be a unique and signiƒcant catalyst for the surrounding community,” Tomon said. Meanwhile, Harris County o„cials said they will construct a 25,000-square-foot annex within the Toro District to expand access to local government services for northwest Harris County residents. The partnership received unanimous approval Feb. 12 in Harris County Commissioners Court. Precinct 3 Commissioner Tom Ramsey and Precinct 4 Commissioner Lesley Briones are spearheading the county’s involvement in the partnership through the creation of a tax increment reinvestment zone, or a TIRZ. The project is estimated to have a long-term economic impact of about $34 billion, o„cials said.

The development will create what’s intended to become the “business district” of Cypress, ocials said Feb 25.

Plans for the multimillion-dollar Texans facilities include a eldhouse with capacity for up to 16,000 spectators.

Multifamily housing residents will be within walking distance to restaurants, retail and oce space.

4 new parks with walk and bike trails 3 outdoor NFL training ƒelds 2 hotels totaling 300 rooms

175,000-square-foot ƒeldhouse and performance center 5,000 parking spaces 1,300 units of multifamily housing

1 million square feet o„ce space 300,000 square feet retail and restaurants 250,000 square feet health care space

SOURCE: HOWARD HUGHES COMMUNITIES¥COMMUNITY IMPACT

“The more jobs we create in our community, the more the commercial developments support the tax base, the residents bene‹t, the quality of life goes up and the overall experience is better,” O’Reilly said. Ramsey and Briones said in addition to boost- ing local economic growth, the investment will expand public green space and accelerate road and drainage improvements in the Cy-Fair area. Planned projects include roadway extensions at Mason and Peek roads and pedestrian crossings along busy corridors. Harris County’s contributions will be funded through a TIRZ, an agreement that requires the developer to use a portion of collected property tax revenue to fund road and infrastructure improvements in the area. The exact TIRZ boundary for the Toro District project is still being ‹nalized as of press time, Precinct 4 o–cials said.

The impact

Upcoming projects

Grand Parkway widening

Mason Road expansion and bridge

1

2

Tomon said the Texans were involved in conver- sations with other counties when scoping a site for their new home base, but they were particularly attracted to the rapid growth near Hwy. 290 and the Grand Parkway when Howard Hughes approached them about a year ago. Harris County’s population as a whole is expected to grow by approximately 40% over the next 25 years, and population growth in the northwest corridor could exceed 300% in the same time frame, Briones said. A closer look Howard Hughes CEO David O’Reilly told Community Impact the Toro District is projected to generate at least 17,000 local jobs and represents an opportunity to intentionally shape growth as it occurs.

290

77433

99 TOLL

1

2

MASON RD.

CYPRESS CREEK

N. BRIDGELAND LAKE PKWY.

N

Population, housing growth in 77433 2019 Total population 2024

90,657 116,550

+28.5%

Total housing units

28,981 35,892

SOURCES: HARRIS COUNTY PRECINCT 3, TXDOT, U.S. CENSUS BUREAU COMMUNITY IMPACT

+23.8%

22

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY SARAH BRAGER

Another detail

Looking forward

“This is the future center of gravity for Harris County, and it will be catalyzed by this landmark transformational

O–cials said the Toro District project also has a large focus on educational opportunities for students in Cy-Fair ISD, Waller ISD and the Lone Star College System. Tomon said the school districts will be able to use the Texans’ ‹eldhouse and practice ‹elds for high school graduations, šag football and other youth events. Additionally, the Texans will partner with local schools to establish sports-focused internship and career pathway programs. CFISD Superintendent Doug Killian said CFISD has been in communication with Howard Hughes and the Texans to discuss student programming, and the district will stay involved as the develop- ment nears completion. “The economic development for us is going to be huge,” Killian told Community Impact . “We’re going to have all sorts of real estate development that’s going to lead to cheaper taxes for [CFISD] because it brings in revenue from more places.”

The timeline and cost for the county annex and parks and infrastructure projects are still in the works, Harris County o‘cials said. O’Reilly said Howard Hughes is aiming to complete the Toro District in time for the Texans to use the new facilities ahead of the 2029-30 NFL season. While no plans have been con˜rmed, Tomon said the Texans have been working with Harris County and Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo to plan “the next iteration of NRG Park.” The Texans will continue to play home games at NRG Stadium. “As a Cy-Fair guy myself, it means a lot to me personally to do this right here,” Texans owner and CEO Cal McNair said Feb. 25. Howard Hughes will announce Toro District tenants in the coming months, o‘cials said. “We’ve been looking for the center of Cypress for the last 20 years,” Ramsey said. “Well, we’re about to ˜nd it.”

public-private partnership.” LESLEY BRIONES, HARRIS COUNTY PRECINCT 4 COMMISSIONER

“When we look at what is world-class, a big component that we love and we associate with that is being engaged in the community.” MIKE TOMON, HOUSTON TEXANS PRESIDENT

The perfect fit for home Discover why Bridgeland is the fastest- growing community in Houston. With award- winning amenities, beautiful new homes, and now, Bridgeland Central – the community’s vibrant urban core oering restaurants, retail, entertainment, and everyday conveniences. Bridgeland is the perfect place to call home.

Start your search today at bridgeland.com

NEW HOMES FROM THE $300s

Homes within Bridgeland are constructed and sold by builders not aliated with Howard Hughes Communities (HHC) or any of its aliates, companies, or partnerships. Neither HHC nor any of its aliated companies or partnerships guarantees or warrants the obligations of, or construction by, such builders. Prices and specifications subject to change.

23

CYFAIR  JERSEY VILLAGE EDITION

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