Dramatic before and after images show Houston underwater
The catastrophic floods that poured into Houston in the wake of Hurricane Harvey have produced jaw-dropping images of America’s fourth-largest city underwater. Since Friday, when Harvey made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane, Houston has been hit with more than 20 inches of rain, overwhelming the banks of the Buffalo Bayou that cuts through the center of the city.
Related: How to help victims of the storm
On Twitter, users shared photos and videos of what parts of Houston looked like before and after the flood, including roads, bridges and interstate highways. The before and after images show the magnitude of the devastation.
Before the flood and after on Buffalo Bayou in Houston. Just an unreal amount of water https://t.co/8CcdEdKhtE pic.twitter.com/J33MHpA80R
— Brian L Kahn (@blkahn) August 27, 2017
This view of Houston's I-45 on a normal day vs. right now helps to contextualize the magnitude of the flooding. pic.twitter.com/3vFCJKgrzQ
— Matt McDermott (@mattmfm) August 27, 2017
This is what we are dealing with. #HoustonFloods pic.twitter.com/Z4j4aIC3WH
— Shahrukh Niazi (@sniazis) August 27, 2017
Houston, before and after (so far) https://t.co/xFUCL6r7xq pic.twitter.com/UyEjrqH6y2
— Justin Miller (@justinjm1) August 27, 2017
Compare these two shots of the same spot in Houston to understand the level of the floods. pic.twitter.com/4apTzuzNck
— John O'Shea (@politicalhackuk) August 27, 2017
Footage from around Houston before and after Harvey shows devastating flooding. Read More: https://t.co/vjApC6fXWj pic.twitter.com/YarcVH9e8Q
— New York Times Video (@nytvideo) August 28, 2017
Photos provided by a Texas resident shows Houston before and after Hurricane Harvey's devastating flooding https://t.co/WZP2arvuWh pic.twitter.com/DX3ih27jwS
— CBS News (@CBSNews) August 27, 2017
Other images, though, did not need a “before” to illustrate its scope.
Intersection along San Houston Pkwy. Water about 17 feet deep. @BrandiKHOU and photog Mario only thing on KHOU. Studio evacuated. pic.twitter.com/TeF6hc1ebu
— Kevin Selle (@kevinselle) August 27, 2017
And Houston is bracing for even more flooding as forecasters say an additional 30 inches of rain could fall in southeast Texas before the slow-moving storm departs.
“Catastrophic flooding in the Houston metropolitan area is expected to worsen,” the National Weather Service said Sunday. “This event is unprecedented, and all impacts are unknown and beyond anything experienced.”
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