In case anyone was interested, a friend shared this map,
https://storms.ngs.noaa.gov/storms/harvey/index.htmlwhich is a compilation of aerial photos of the flooding in the city. I live in the NW, and work south of I-10, the major East to West highway through Houston. I would have to drive at least 10 miles east or west just to get to the south side of 10, and my office.
Found my office on the map and if looks like if they didn't get flooded, it was a close call. It's nearly an island. Not sure if they will be open next week, but I won't be going in for quite a while - no way I'm trying that commute. It would go from ~11mi to more than 30-40 each way, and with only 2 roads open in a 20 mile span, it would probably take at least 3 hours each way.
We were extremely fortunate, and have have been trying to help out our friends and folks in our community that were flooded. We've taken a few donations to a local shelter, and they are working to organize transports out to the more remote/coastal towns and the areas that are still flooded. We've also managed to fix our fence - still need to address the water seepage/drainage, but it didn't damage anything inside. (Just some cleaning and disinfecting to be safe.) One of the schools in our district was a total loss - at least through the first half of the school year. Kids are supposed to go back next week - I have mixed feelings - it will be good for them to get back, and the school is making sure they all get breakfast and lunch (no cost) - at the same time, I know the commute may end up being very challenging for teachers and staff that don't live in the district/same neighborhoods as the schools.
From the local news, final rainfall total for our subdivision was 65". For perspective, when not wearing fabulous heels, I'm 63.5".