Baltimore Sun

Undergroun­d fire causes an explosion downtown

About 1,700 BGE customers temporaril­y left without power

- By Dillon Mullan, Bill Wachsberge­r and Caitlyn Freeman

Many downtown Baltimore residents and businesses were without power after a maintenanc­e hole cover popped off during an undergroun­d fire in the 300 block of North Charles Street late Thursday night.

The explosion happened outside Rod Dee Thai restaurant at 340 North Charles between Saratoga and Mulberry streets. As of Friday at 4 p.m., Charles Street was still closed at Saratoga Street.

Talon Sachs, a BGE spokespers­on said Friday morning that customers may experience additional temporary service interrupti­ons during the undergroun­d restoratio­n process to install electric cables.

“Preliminar­ily, we think it was an electrical fire,” Kevin Cartwright, the fire department’s director of communicat­ions, said Thursday night. “We ran tests and there were no readings for gas.”

There were no injuries, he added.

The City’s Department of Public Works’ Office of Emergency Management said in a news release sent out early Friday morning that initial assessment­s found smoke from multiple manhole covers and fire emitting from one cover.

The fire appears to have impacted undergroun­d electrical conduits along North Charles Street.

The incident prompted BGE to shut down power to the area around the 300 and 400 blocks of N. Charles Street to extinguish the fire, causing about 1,700 customers to lose service, BGE said in a statement released Friday morning.

As of Friday evening most of the outages appear to be resolved.

The main Mercy Hospital facility, located at 345 St. Paul Place, remained “largely unaffected,” DPW said in its news release. However, some garages and buildings went without power for a period.

“There are also several city buildings that were impacted by the outage, with essential buildings running on emergency power,” the release said.

City and BGE officials worked at the scene Friday morning and the city advised drivers to avoid that portion of Charles Street.

Additional­ly, the Mitchell and Cummings Courthouse­s were closed Friday due to the explosion.

The DPW did not respond to requests for updated informatio­n by Friday late afternoon.

Mick O’Sheas Irish Pub, located at 328 N. Charles Street, was closed Friday due to the explosion. Server Sara Hennessey heard the explosion while working.

“First, I heard a loud bang. I looked outside and saw what I thought was fog,” she said Thursday evening.

“The firefighte­rs showed up to the restaurant and had us leave through the back door. I thought it was a truck going over something on the first bang. There were two bangs.”

The explosion also caused an interrupti­on to the city’s 911 dispatch around 1 a.m. on Friday, the city news release said.

“During the communicat­ions interrupti­on, the new emergency service radio system allowed both BPD and BCFD to easily switch to alternativ­es, utilizing surroundin­g jurisdicti­ons and state-wide channels,” the release said. “Emergency services continue to utilize those alternativ­es, due to ongoing intermitte­nt interrupti­ons. There is currently no disruption to the 9-1-1 call handling process.”

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/STAFF ?? A member of the Baltimore City Fire Department is silhouette­d against emergency lights in the 300 block of Charles Street Friday morning following an undergroun­d fire late Thursday night.
JERRY JACKSON/STAFF A member of the Baltimore City Fire Department is silhouette­d against emergency lights in the 300 block of Charles Street Friday morning following an undergroun­d fire late Thursday night.

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