Las Vegas Review-Journal

San Francisco residents flee after gas explosions

Five buildings damaged but no injuries reported

- By Janie Har The Associated Press

SANFRANCIS­CO— A gas explosion in a San Francisco neighborho­od shot flames into the air for hours Wednesday and burned five buildings, sending panicked residents and workers fleeing into the streets.

It took utility crews more than two hours to put out the fire after private constructi­on workers cut a natural gas line, igniting the towering flames, Fire Chief Joanne Hayeswhite said. Authoritie­s initially said five workers were missing, but the entire constructi­on crew was found safe, and no other injuries were reported.

Officials evacuated several nearby buildings, including a medical clinic and apartment buildings, Hayeswhite said. Vehicles on a busy street got rerouted as authoritie­s cordoned off the bustling retail and residentia­l neighborho­od.

The fire damaged a building housing Hong Kong Lounge II, a popular dim sum restaurant frequented by tourists and students at the University of San Francisco that made many “best of ” lists.

Caroline Gasparini, 24, who lives catty-corner from where the fire ignited, said she and her housemate were in their living room when the windows started rattling. She looked up to see flames reflected in the glass.

“We went into crisis mode,” Gasparini said. “We grabbed our shoes, grabbed our laptops and grabbed our passports and just left.”

Gasparini said they saw employees of the burning restaurant run out the back door and people fleeing down the block.

Nick Jalali, 28, was cooking at home when the electricit­y cut out.

“We didn’t hear anything,” he said. “We just felt the shaking, and the next thing we knew, people were banging on the door to tell people it’s time to start evacuating.”

Firefighte­rs worked to keep the fire from spreading while Pacific Gas & Electric crews tried to shut off the natural gas line.

PG&E spokeswoma­n Melissa Subbotin said state excavation rules required crews to dig by hand around other pipelines before they were eventually able to “squeeze” a 4-inch plastic line.

She said that because the fire was contained to a limited area, the utility had to weigh the threat from the fire with the risk of more drastic action.

“Had we turned the gas off to a transmissi­on system, we would have shut off gas to nearly the entire city of San Francisco,” she said.

“The objective of this was to turn the gas off safely and as quickly as possible.”

The fire began around 1:20 p.m., apparently by crews working on fiber-optic wires, Hayes-white said.

Joseph Feusi lives four blocks away and said he was awoken by what sounded like a jet engine. Feusi, who works nights and sleeps in the afternoon, said he could see the towering flames from his home.

“I think the eight guys are really lucky they didn’t get blown to bits,” he said.

 ?? Jeff Chiu The Associated Press ?? Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-white, second from right, listens as Pacific Gas & Electric spokesman Paul Doherty speaks to reporters about a fire Wednesday on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco.
Jeff Chiu The Associated Press Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-white, second from right, listens as Pacific Gas & Electric spokesman Paul Doherty speaks to reporters about a fire Wednesday on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco.

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