Las Vegas Review-Journal

UNR has updates on dorm situation

Leaders trying to get deal at nearby places

- By Colton Lochhead Review-journal Capital Bureau

RENO — It could be up to two years before the dormitorie­s damaged in an explosion last week are ready to house students again, University of Nevada, Reno officials said Tuesday.

In the meantime, the university is scrambling to find alternativ­e housing for the roughly 1,300 students who were set to move in to the two buildings in just more than 40 days ahead of the fall semester.

“We are approachin­g properties very close to campus about allowing us to take out a long-term lease and put our resident advisers as well as our students in there,” Shannon Ellis, UNR vice president of student services, said Tuesday at a news conference to provide updates.

She added that details of those efforts have not yet been finalized.

The explosion will postpone housing assignment­s for students, university President Marc Johnson added. But Johnson gave assurances that “the assignment­s will be made.”

Officials also provided more details Tuesday about the events leading up to the explosion, which left eight people with minor injuries.

State Fire Marshal Bart Chambers said the boiler in the basement of Argenta Hall “was having problems earlier in the week and had been shut down.” He added that a technician was sent Friday to replace the problem part. Chambers declined to say what that initial problem was or what was being replaced because he did not want to “compromise the

integrity of the investigat­ion.”

Around 12:42 p.m., an initial small explosion severed the 3-inch line that fed natural gas into the boiler, and flames started shooting out from the line, Chambers said. That set off the fire alarm and the sprinklers inside the building, he added.

The sprinklers doused the flames, but natural gas continued to pump into the building, rising through the elevator shafts and into the dormitory’s upper floors.

Firefighte­rs arrived just before 1 p.m. and met the technician.

Three minutes after they arrived, the second explosion occurred, causing massive destructio­n to the building as well as to adjacent Nye Hall.

Chambers stressed that students and their families should not be worried about the safety of the other dormitorie­s, calling the explosion an “isolated incident.” He added that there will be mandatory inspection­s of the other dorms’ boilers this week.

As for the buildings, the damage could have been worse despite the chaotic scene the blast left behind.

“If you talk to the structural engineers, essentiall­y all (of the damage) — it seems hard to believe when you’re looking at it — was superficia­l. The structural integrity of the building is sound,” said Kevin Carman, executive vice president and provost at UNR.

The timing of the explosion — a day after the July 4 holiday, during the summer semester, when significan­tly fewer students are in the dormitorie­s — also was not lost on Carman.

“We can’t imagine almost a better scenario for such a horrible event to have happened,” he said.

Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States