
Two Lamborghinis collided Monday on the feeder road of State Highway 99 at Jack Road near the Grand Parkway in northwest Harris County, and one of the high-end cars erupted in flames. Photos from the scene show both vehicles mangled, with one almost completely charred under melted trim and scorched paint. Despite the dramatic wreckage, firefighters said both drivers walked away and there were no reported injuries.
Fiery scene on the SH 99 feeder
In images shared Monday night by the Cy-Fair Fire Department, the two battered exotics are scattered along the Highway 99 feeder, one of them wrapped in flames as crews arrived, as reported by Houston Chronicle. Firefighters quickly knocked down the blaze and confirmed that no one at the scene was hurt. Officials have not said what led up to the impact.
What firefighters found
KTRK's ABC13 also shared the Cy-Fair Fire Department update and photos, noting the wreck happened on the Highway 99 feeder at Jack Road and that crews pulled up to find one Lamborghini on fire, according to ABC13. The station reported that both drivers were able to walk away and that Cy-Fair made the images public. Neither the fire department nor law enforcement had released a cause or timeline for the crash in those posts.
Crash-prone stretch of Grand Parkway
The Grand Parkway corridor has seen a string of serious wrecks in recent months, ranging from heavy-truck crashes to high-speed collisions that ended in fires. FOX26 reported a separate March crash in north Harris County that led to a post-impact blaze and fatalities, and the station also covered an April wreck that briefly shut down westbound lanes on the Grand Parkway, underscoring how quickly incidents along this highway can spiral, per FOX26 and FOX26. Local traffic monitors sometimes close lanes on SH-99 after severe crashes while crews remove debris and other hazards.
Details still under investigation
Beyond the photos and the Cy-Fair Fire Department's brief update, few official details have been released about the Lamborghini collision, and investigators have not described what caused it, the Houston Chronicle notes. Chronicle reporters said they have asked Cy-Fair Fire Department officials for more information and are awaiting a response.









