Wednesday, October 07, 2015

Tenants' Stove Removal Without First Shutting Off Gas Before Vacating Premises May Be To Blame In Blast That Left One Resident Dead, Another Missing, Numerous Others Injured, Dozens Displaced As City Issues Vacate Orders For Five Buildings; Landlord Left w/ Hollowed-Out Shell

In Borough Park, Brooklyn, the New York Daily News reports (via The Real Deal (NYC)):
  • The removal of a high-end stove may have sparked a massive gas explosion that tore the front off a Brooklyn building and left one woman dead Saturday, officials said.

    With the wreckage marring the Borough Park street, police were still searching early Sunday for another resident who was missing.

    FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro said the gas leak that triggered the deadly blast may have been caused when second-floor tenants of the 13th Ave. building near 42nd St. recently moved.

    They took the stove, but apparently neglected to have the gas line turned off.

    “They were moving out of the apartment and wanted to take that stove with them,” Nigro said at a Saturday afternoon news conference. “(Taking) a stove with you entails disconnecting the gas line which leads us preliminarily to look in that direction for the cause of this explosion.”

    The force of the explosion left behind a hollowed-out shell along a string of aluminum-sided, three-story buildings.

    “The front of this building was blown out into the street,” Nigro said. “We have not yet been in that building because of the structural damage.”

    The dead woman was believed to be a Dominican in her 60s who lived on the third floor, according to sources.

    Her burned body was found on the building stairwell, officials said.

    Firefighters laid a sheet over her before continuing their search for survivors, witnesses said.

    Three victims, including a 34-year-old man, his 9-year-old son, and a 27-year-old man were caught in the storm of debris.

    They were rushed to New York Methodist Hospital with minor injuries to their legs, officials said.

    “It was a tough day here in Borough Park,” said Mayor de Blasio as he returned to a community he once represented in the City Council Saturday. “This is a tragedy because we know that we have lost one person. It is also the Sabbath day. I know it was a real shock to the residents of this community to hear this explosion.”

    Shell-shocked neighbors said a menacing black plume of smoke descended on the street as the fire ripped through the building that once held the “Pots N Watts” appliance store.

    “It was dark ... like night,” said 11-year-old Roza Arafa Chowdhury, recalling the moments after the 1:05 p.m. blast. “A guy was trying to take his father (away from the scene) but the fire was too big and they were burned.”

    Five out of the more than 200 firefighters who responded to the scene suffered minor injuries, Nigro said.

    Salvadore Toree, who lives next door to the doomed building, had just gotten into his friend’s car when he heard the blast.

    “We got out and saw smoke and glass everywhere,” he told The News, speaking in Spanish. “I thought about my family. The flames were huge and I was scared that the building could collapse.”

    His building wasn’t damaged but the one next door was consumed in flames, he said.

    Panicking, he ran up to his third-floor apartment and told his wife, two daughters and son that everyone had to leave.

    “They left with nothing ... without shoes,” he said. “I was afraid something else would explode. Thank God we’re OK.”

    By Saturday evening, the fire was out, but the building remained structurally unsound.
Source: Explosion at Brooklyn building that killed one woman may have been caused by tenants removing high-end stove: officials.

See also, Crews Seek Missing Woman and Cause After Brooklyn Explosion:
  • About 50 residents were evacuated from the area and forced to seek shelter elsewhere overnight, Mr. Lander said. The Fire Department said 10 firefighters had been treated for minor injuries. Three neighboring buildings were damaged by the explosion, fire and smoke, officials said. [...] On Sunday, the block where the explosion occurred was a “frozen zone,” where business were closed and five buildings remained under orders to vacate, the police said.