Many pedestrian injuries in Baytown stem from predictable daily patterns—people walking to work, crossing near retail areas, or trying to get across multilane streets safely.
Typical starting points include:
- Multi-lane roadway crossings where drivers must judge distance and speed quickly
- Turning-vehicle conflicts near entrances, parking lots, and traffic signals
- Construction and lane changes that reduce visibility for both drivers and walkers
- Night and low-light areas where glare, street lighting, and reflective gear matter
In these situations, insurance companies may argue the pedestrian was in the wrong place or that the driver couldn’t have stopped in time. The case often turns on the timeline—what the driver could see, what the pedestrian did, and what the roadway required.


