House exploded minutes after gas leak was reported
Inquest: Death of grandmother was accident
THE death of a 79-year-old great-grandmother killed in a Birmingham house blast triggered by a “decades-old” faulty copper gas pipe join was accidental, an inquest jury has concluded.
Retired pub landlady Doreen Mace, originally from Erdington, was described by her relatives during the two-day inquest as a “once-in-a-lifetime soul”.
She died at a house owned by her partner, David Murphy, in Dulwich Road, Kingstanding, on Sunday, June 26 last year, in a blast that caused what the coroner described as a “Hollywood film-esque level of destruction”.
At the start of the hearing, the inquest’s 11-member jury was shown an image of a ‘gas pipe separation’ under the floor of the living room, which was at the root of the explosion.
It also emerged Mr Murphy had called UK gas distribution network Cadent at 8.22pm that Sunday, reporting he could smell ‘what he thought was gas’. His hob was no longer working, and the meter was ‘making a noise’, he said.
He was told by a call handler ‘not to use any source of ignition, and to ventilate the house’, and that an engineer would arrive within the hour, the coroner said.
Less than 15 minutes after the call ended, the house exploded.
Numerous 999 calls were made – the first at 8.38pm – by neighbours, who described a ‘huge bang’ and said 129 Dulwich Road had been ‘flattened’ and was ‘completely missing’.
The blast was so violent that it sent roof tiles through the windows of a leisure centre 114ft away, and, while initially there was only a small fire, it grew so that searches for Ms Mace had to be called off for safety reasons.
The body of Ms Mace, of Elmwood Road, Erdington, was later recovered under 3ft of rubble from the lounge at the front of the property.
Her partner, Mr Murphy – though suffering ‘relatively significant injuries’ – survived, having earlier been rescued from the rubble of the kitchen – where he had been shielded by a fridge – by members of the public, who carried him away using a mattress. Mr Murphy was not called as a witness to give evidence at the inquest by the coroner, who said it was not necessary.
James Bennett, Birmingham and Solihull area coroner, said: “He indicated to police his recollection was poor, he was seriously injured, I don’t think it would be appropriate to put him through the stress of recalling in events in public.”
The wreckage of the house and three other neighbouring properties, found to be structurally unsound, were later demolished.
The coroner told the inquest ‘many years ago – potentially decades,’ whoever installed the gas pipe had used a type of fitting which needed soldering but had not done so.
He said: “So, at that joint, it was never soldered or welded and, sadly, we reach a point where natural gas is escaping into the property. It eventually ignites, causing the explosion.
“It appears Doreen, sadly, was in the lounge at the point of the explosion.”
The coroner also heard the floorboards in the bay area of the lounge were bowing because some of the joists were rotting. However, the jury later heard the boards were not directly above the joint.
Jurors, who delivered their conclusions after deliberating for just under two hours on Tuesday, found Ms Mace’s cause of death was from ‘consequences of an explosion that caused a house to collapse’.
Delivering a brief record of what happened, and a conclusion of accidental death, jurors concluded the circumstances were as a result of ‘a gas explosion at 129 Dulwich Road on June 26, 2022, at around 8.38pm, which caused a house to collapse onto the deceased, who was in the lounge area’.
The former Birmingham City Council house was nearly 100 years old, with the home – privately owned in 1981 – about to be sold.