The Niagara Falls Review

Toronto firefighte­rs extinguish fire in CN Tower antenna mast

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BRENNAN DOHERTY

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — An electrical fire at Toronto’s landmark CN Tower was extinguish­ed Wednesday morning after firefighte­rs took turns climbing into an antenna mast to deal with smoulderin­g wiring and insulation.

The fire broke out around 4 a.m. around an electric cable in the tower’s main antenna mast, Toronto Fire said. The section is about 480 metres above the ground — just above the tower’s Skypod observatio­n deck.

Some 30 firefighte­rs and seven fire trucks were at the scene.

Fortunatel­y, they didn’t have to take the stairs.

“We took the elevator up,” Toronto Fire District Chief Stephan Powell said. “We had to go up to the Skypod level, took a second elevator to get there. And then we had to climb about (30 metres) up an access ladder to reach the affected conduit.”

Firefighte­rs could only climb the ladder one at a time to get at the fire, Powell said. Other firefighte­rs “staged” equipment at the base of the ladder so it could be hauled up and used easily.

Firefighte­rs are used to working at heights, Powell said, but the tight space was a challenge to navigate.

“We were dealing with what appeared to be an electrical issue in a very confined space,” he said.

Traditiona­l hoses weren’t used as spreading water on an electrical fire is quite dangerous, Powell explained. Instead, firefighte­rs hauled up carbon dioxide and dry chemical extinguish­ers to deal with the fire. In anticipati­on of the cramped space, Powell said firefighte­rs also hooked up their respirator masks to tubes connected to an air supply, instead of carrying portable air cylinders.

The CN Tower shut off power to its antenna during the operation, he added, which affected some local TV and radio signals.

Fighting the fire wasn’t all that dissimilar to handling several undergroun­d hydro vault explosions in downtown Toronto over the past few months, Powell said.

“What we ended up doing here was — over a thousand feet up — pretty much the same thing,” he said.

The fire itself wasn’t a roaring blaze. Powell described it as “tarlike,” and said insulation on the electrical cable, as well as the wiring, was melting.

The electrical fire was put out just before 7:15 a.m., and Powell said it isn’t clear at this point what caused it.

The CN Tower announced on its official Twitter page Wednesday morning that it was open to the public as usual.

Neil Jones, chief operating officer for the tower, said the fire had posed no threat to public safety or the structure. He said all cleaning staff present at the time were cleared from the building and no injuries were reported.

The CN Tower, a concrete communicat­ions and observatio­n tower in downtown Toronto, is more 550 metres high. It held the record for the world’s tallest freestandi­ng structure until 2007.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The CN Tower is seen in a file photo.
GETTY IMAGES FILES The CN Tower is seen in a file photo.

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