New
York buildings collapse in possible gas blast, 19 hurt
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[March 27, 2015]
By Ellen Wulfhorst and Sebastien Malo
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Four apartment
buildings in New York's East Village neighborhood caught fire from an
apparent gas explosion on Thursday and three collapsed, causing 19
injuries, authorities said.
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The blast shortly after 3 p.m. sent flames leaping into the sky
and rocked the residential area in Manhattan. Bloodied victims ran
from the buildings, collapsing on the street, witnesses said.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio told a news conference that
preliminary evidence indicated it was a gas-related explosion.
A Fire Department spokesman said late on Thursday that three of the
four buildings had collapsed or partially collapsed.
The fourth building "is still involved with some pockets of fire,
it's still an active scene. Investigation is still ongoing," he
said.
Nineteen people were hurt. Four, all civilians, were in critical
condition, the spokesman said.
The Con Edison <ED.N> utility said in a statement that its
inspectors had been at the site on Thursday to evaluate work a
building plumber was doing in a building for a gas service upgrade.
The work failed to pass inspection, it said.
The seven-alarm blaze in the neighborhood of small businesses,
restaurants and apartments involved more than 250 Fire Department
personnel.
Moishe Perl, 64, who owns Moishe’s Bake Shop nearby, said he heard
an explosion, ran outside and saw the lower floors of a building
start to crumble.
"Most of the people were running out of the building and climbing
down the fire escape," he said, while others were helped out of
windows by passersby.
Ben Mackinnon, 28, said he was drinking coffee in a cafe when he
heard an explosion from across the street.
"The explosion was big enough that the door of the cafe blew open,"
Mackinnon said.
He said he saw several bloodied men emerge from a sushi restaurant
where the explosion appeared to originate. One of them fell to the
pavement.
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Shameem Noor, a cashier at the Veselka restaurant about a block
away, said he heard the blast and saw three or four people fall to
the street.
The four buildings contain 49 apartments, according to a spokesman
for the American Red Cross at the scene. The ground floors were
occupied by small eateries.
A relocation center for displaced residents was set up in a nearby
elementary school, the Red Cross spokesman said.
Early on Friday morning, firefighters were battling a separate
apartment blaze burning on the top floor of a six-story building
some 3 miles (5 km) north, the New York Fire Department said. There
were no immediate reports of injuries.
(Reporting by Sebastien Malo and Ellen Wulfhorst; Additional
reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington and Laila Kearney in New
York; Writing by Ian Simpson; Editing by Sandra Maler, Eric Beech
and Peter Cooney)
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