Possible gas explosion levels 3 Philadelphia row houses
One person was rescued and others were feared dead after a possible gas explosion toppled three South Philadelphia row houses and significantly damaged two other buildings on Thursday, officials said.
Firefighters were looking for at least one person in one collapsed building after responding to reports of an explosion and fire at a tenement on South Eighth Street about 11:30 a.m., Fire Commissioner Adam Thiel told reporters.
The person was trapped under heavy debris and is believed to have died, he said. There were unconfirmed reports of possibly one or two other people trapped in the damaged buildings, Thiel said.
“We have to bring in heavy equipment to start de-layering the collapsed building,” the commissioner said, describing the scene as still “dangerous and unstable.”
“While we're hopeful ... unfortunately we're probably in a recovery mode now.”
About 60 people were evacuated from the block, the commissioner said.
The recovery effort was being hampered by the structural damage to the buildings and what authorities believe is a sinkhole forming in the street.
The heavy “gas-fed” fire, plus structural damage to several buildings, prevented firefighters from immediately determining whether people were trapped inside,
Thiel said. The cause of the explosion and fire was under investigation.
“We are still not sure what the occupancy status is of the fully collapsed building,” he said earlier.
“This will be an extremely risky and dangerous operation ... to perform a thorough search and hopefully rescue anybody who might be inside,” the commissioner added.
For much of Thursday afternoon, firefighters sprayed water on buildings engulfed in flames, according to news footage from the scene.
Plumes of white smoke rose over a row of tenements as firefighters on adjoining rooftops tried to prevent the blaze from spreading. Neighboring buildings were evacuated and power was shut off to the area, Thiel said. More than 100 firefighters and other first responders descended on the block.
The blaze was declared under control at 2:43 p.m., fire officials said via Twitter.
Thiel said crews were dealing with an “active firefight” before commencing the search for possible trapped residents.
“We're still trying to figure out how many people occupied these buildings, where they were when this occurred,” he said. “There's still a lot of uncertainty.”
One damaged building is a commercial property, the commissioner said. Firefighters and police were going door-todoor to try to determine who might have been in the buildings.