Houston Chronicle Sunday

Hundred-Acre Preserve now true to name

Conservanc­y to add new tract of land after trail constructi­on project

- By Madlin Mekelburg

A change to an agreement between Harris County and the Bayou Land Conservanc­y will add 2.73 acres to the Hundred-Acre Wood Preserve, which, despite its name, was previously just shy of 99 acres.

The addition came after Harris County ran into trouble earlier this year while constructi­ng trails through the area.

Jennifer Lorenz, executive director of the conservanc­y, said the conservati­on easement ensuring the protection of the preserve was amended to include the new acreage and an allowance for a wider constructi­on corridor after developmen­t of trails overseen by Harris County exceeded the agreed-upon width. ‘98 percent’

The 2.73-acre tract was added to the Bayou Land Conservanc­y’s existing conservati­on easement. The previous 20-foot-wide constructi­on corridor allowed under the easement for trail constructi­on was expanded to 50 feet.

“They cleared wider than they were supposed to,” Lorenz said of the county. “We had an agreement with them about how wide they could go and this 2.7 acres is what was offered after the fact.”

She said dead trees had been removed from the sides of the trail that were outside of the designated area for trail constructi­on to take place. Despite Lorenz’s claims that the new land was added to the easement to compensate for the error, Harris County Precinct 4 project manager Mike Howelett said it was unrelated.

“The county was able to acquire a 2.73-acre tract that is adjacent to the HundredAcr­e Wood and since the Hundred-Acre Wood property was actually less than 100 acres, we felt it prudent that this 2.73 acres was added to the easement,” he said of the preserve, located about 15 miles southwest of Spring.

Although Lorenz said the conservanc­y agreed to allow a maximum 50-foot width for trail constructi­on in the area, the final trails will likely be one-fifth that width. She said the concession is unique for the conservanc­y, and that it would not allow a similar distance on “98 percent” of their other preserves.

“The issue is that we wouldn’t even be talking about this had they stayed within their boundaries,” Lorenz said. “It is difficult in these forested areas to bring in these big trucks that are needed for trail constructi­on... They needed to get an access road. It was to connect another piece on the property that needed to be constructe­d.” ‘Conservati­on value’

The land added to the preserve is slightly larger than two profession­al football fields and makes up a small portion of the entire preserve.

Suzanne Simpson, a biologist at the Bayou Land Conservanc­y, said the new acreage includes four different species of oak trees as well as a number of animal species including beavers, woodpecker­s and dragonflie­s.

Lorenz said the conservanc­y is pleased with the addition of the 2.73 acres to the easement, even though they had to negotiate on the constructi­on corridor.

“It was an unfortunat­e violation of that preserve,” she said. “When we have issues, we deal with them. That’s the benefit of working with us on any project, which is that we ensure that the conservati­on value gets preserved.”

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