Western Morning News

Homes destroyed and child killed in gas blast

- MIKE BEDIGAN & CATHERINE WYLIE

AYOUNG child has been killed in a “devastatin­g” explosion which caused at least two houses to collapse and damaged several others.

Residents described the noise of the blast as “like a bomb going off” with debris that covered nearby streets and fields.

Lancashire Police said they were called to the scene of the explosion in Heysham at 2.40am yesterday, after reports that “a number” of houses on Mallowdale Avenue had collapsed.

The force later confirmed the death of a child and said four people had been injured, two seriously. It is suspected the damage was caused by a gas explosion.

Lancashire Fire said on Twitter that ten units had been called to the terraced row and firefighte­rs were searching a collapsed property.

Speaking to reporters at the scene, Joe Edwards, Assistant Chief Constable of Lancashire Police, said: “Shortly after 2.40am this morning, emergency services were called to residentia­l properties following reports of a large explosion at the address.

“There is significan­t damage to the houses, at least two have been destroyed and a third is significan­tly damaged.

“As a consequenc­e of that, a number of people have been injured.

“Tragically, a young child has been killed as a consequenc­e of what has happened and the thoughts of myself and all the emergency services are with the family at what is a distressin­g time.

“The informatio­n as we know it is that there are four persons that have also been injured in the incident, two of which are seriously injured and two others who remain under medical assessment.”

Ben Norman, Assistant Chief Fire Officer of Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service, said that fire crews remained at the scene and an investigat­ion into the cause of the blast would be carried out “slowly and methodical­ly”.

“We’ll work to conclude this incident safely and work with support and concern for the local community to ensure they can rebuild and go back to their normal lives in due course,” he said.

“Sadly at this time it means there are a number of people whose homes have been affected and therefore they can’t remain in the area.

“We ask people to have patience and particular­ly to have the family that have been affected in mind.”

Resident Susan Faulkner, 74, who lives further down Mallowdale Avenue, said the blast was “like a bomb going off ” and that she was still “shaken” by the incident.

“I woke up with this huge bang and I thought someone was breaking into my house,” she told the Press Associatio­n.

“The sound really shook me, I’m still quite shaken by it. I’ve never experience­d that before.

“It was like a bomb going off, it was that kind of impact.”

Ms Faulkner said that her own property and others in the immediate area had been damaged in the “devastatin­g” explosion.

“It was quite a blast, I live quite a way down there and part of my side door was blown in. My next door neighbour’s plates were smashed.”

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