All posts by viking210

Shawnee, KS – Sprinkler system helps minimize damage in fire at Hy-Vee store

Shortly before 7 a.m. Saturday, a fire broke out in the deli kitchen area of the Shawnee Hy-Vee. Firefighters say workers were setting up for the morning buffet, when a hot steno lighter was put in storage. It spilled and caught fire.  Employees tried to extinguish the fire and a sprinkler inside the store did activate.  Fire Marshall Cory Sands says the fire was put out fairly quickly, but there is extensive smoke damage throughout the store.  Sands says all opened food will be thrown out, with a value of about $300,000.

A quick staff response – and sprinkler activation – helped save over $1 million in food and items. The store was evacuated, and no injuries were reported.  The Department of Agriculture has been called. They will have to inspect the store before it re-opens. Sands says he expects the store will be able to re-open this afternoon.

Derby, CT – Sprinkler system assists firefighters in containing apartment building fire; No injuries

There were no injuries reported after a fire in a laundry room on Fourth Street Wednesday. The fire was reported at about 3:20 p.m. within a three-story apartment building at 16 Fourth St. near the Derby Green.

The building’s alarm sounded and about eight people in the building immediately left. The cause and precise origin is under investigation by Derby Fire Marshal Phil Hawks.

The fire started in the building’s laundry room in the basement. Damage was limited to that room, said David Lenart, an assistant Derby fire chief. The building’s sprinkler system and the arriving firefighters kept the flames from spreading.

The building underwent a complete renovation within the last few years. Shelton firefighters responded to the call as well. As of 3:52 p.m., firefighters were carrying in large fans to vent the smoke from the apartment house.

Lincoln, NE – Kitchen fire in downtown loft apartments controlled with help from sprinklers; No injuries

At least one person was displaced Thursday after a small fire at a building on 8th and Q in downtown Lincoln. According to Lincoln Fire & Rescue, the fire started in the kitchen of a loft on the third floor of Arena Lofts.

“In the initial phases we were sent here on a regular box alarm with one engine one truck,” said Capt. Lloyd Mueller, acting Batallion Chief. “We identified that they did have smoke conditions stating that there was a fire in one of the apartments we’ve upgraded the alarms to a second alarm due to the occupancy and the people that are living up above.”

LFR found it was a small fire that started in the kitchen. It is still under investigation whether it was the stove top or a kitchen appliance. “Right now we have a lot of water damage just through the sprinkler system activation,” said Mueller. “So the fire was great enough it did…signal the sprinklers to activate.”

According to LFR, there was nobody in the apartment where the fire started. “A lot of the residents are not around so we’re still trying to get a hold of them and let them know,” said Mueller. Mueller said there was one resident who was displaced. “This is a brand new apartment building so they’re being renovated,” he said.

According to one of the employees with the clean up crew, water damage affected about six apartments and a cigar shop below. Most of the water damage was from the sprinklers.

“We put a very small amount of water on the fire itself due to the sprinklers activation,” said Mueller, “…the water damage is just shutting down the system…getting the water to drain out of the pipes and getting it to not go into the building but outside the building.”

Mueller said the Red Cross and the Chaplain were called out to help those who were displaced.

 

There was no damage to the Twin Peaks restaurant below.

 

Mueller said they had a few animals they protected and put in a safe room in the apartments.

Prescott, AZ – Fire at historic hotel doused by sprinkler system

Twenty to 30 residents of the Downtown Prescott Inn were evacuated mid-day Wednesday, Dec. 23, when fire broke out in one of the rooms. Prescott Fire Battalion Chief Eric Kriwer said the department got the call of fire in a third-floor room in the North Cortez Street hotel (formerly the Head Hotel, built in 1904) just before noon Wednesday.

A fire-sprinkler system in the room doused the fire fairly quickly, Kriwer said, but not before several dozen residents were evacuated from the three-story hotel. The operation required the closure of North Cortez Street, and at about 1:30 p.m., Kriwer said the street closure would likely continue for at least another hour.

Police Chief Jerald Monahan said a number of police officers were on hand to handle the traffic control during the fire operation. “We’re here to support the Fire Department,” he said.

No one was injured in the fire, although two medicals calls occurred at the building at about the same time. Kriwer explained that a fire crew was already on site at the hotel when the department got word of the fire. Then, another medical call occurred in the midst of the fire, although Kriwer did not know the nature of that call.

Although the fire was contained to one room, Kriwer said all of the residents were evacuated. In the aftermath, firefighters were working to secure the building, and get the electricity turned back on. “We haven’t got the power secured yet,” Kriwer explained.

A total of more than 30 fire, police, and Lifeline Ambulance personnel responded to the fire, Kriwer said. A (TIP) Trauma Intervention Program volunteer was also on hand, and Kriwer said, “We will probably have a couple of displaced residents.”

Meanwhile, a group of residents clustered on the sidewalk – many of them bundled with blankets, and wearing flip-flops – waiting to be allowed back into their rooms.

“We’re frozen; we didn’t have time to get socks,” hotel resident Josie Valdez said, waiting on a sidewalk bench. Because her room is on the second floor, Valdez said she didn’t see any sign of the fire when she heard the call to evacuate.

Hotel resident Krista Schmidt, a writer, said she had time to grab only her laptop containing her writing, and a blanket, before leaving her room.

Daiton Rutkowski, who was working in the street-level Keystone Antiques shop Wednesday afternoon, said he had turned 10 to 15 shoppers away, because the Fire Department was not allowing people into the building until the power was restored.

Kriwer said the cause of the fire was still under investigation Wednesday afternoon.

 

Mt Vernon, KY – Overnight fire at county jail suppressed by sprinkler system

A fire early Wednesday at the Rockcastle County jail caused 13 inmates and two jail employees to be sent to hospitals with smoke inhalation.  Police and fire officials were called about 3:20 a.m. to the jail, which housed 102 inmates at the time, Kentucky State Trooper Lloyd Cochran said.

Four jail employees were in the building at the time State police suspect arson, Cochran said. The investigation is open, and no arrests have been made. None of the injuries were thought to be life-threatening, and many of those hospitalized have been released, Cochran said. The injured were taken to hospitals in Rockcastle and Laurel counties.

The fire caused heavy smoke and water damage, Cochran said. It could be closed for several weeks.

All of the inmates were transported to the Laurel County Correctional Center, Cochran said. It was unclear whether the prisoners would be able to stay there until repairs are made to the Rockcastle County jail.

 

Jail employees told police that alarm and sprinkler systems worked as they are supposed to, Cochran said. State police will be able to confirm that alarms and sprinklers worked properly after the investigation is completed.

Bel Air, MD – Fire that started in ductwork controlled with help from sprinklers

One person was injured in an electrical fire at an industrial building in Belcamp Tuesday, according to the Office of the State Fire Marshal.

The fire began at 11:54 a.m. in the ductwork at Böttcher Systems in the 4600 block of Mercedes Drive, according to the report.

An employee and alarm monitoring company discovered the blaze, which began in the exhaust duct, ignited rubber millings, then spread, according to the report, which said a spark detector inside the duct failed to extinguish the millings. The fire was ruled accidental.

The 50-year-old employee who found the fire tried to extinguish it and as a result, he sustained a first-degree burn to his finger, the fire marshal reported. He was treated and released at the scene, the report said.

After the fire and sprinkler systems activated, it took 30 firefighters from Abingdon, Joppa-Magnolia, Aberdeen and Bel Air approximately 15 minutes to bring it under control, the report said.

There was $5,000 in damage to items inside the building, according to the fire marshal.

Yakima, WA – Sprinklers limit fire damage at YWCA; residents and staff safely evacuated

A small child playing with a lighter started a fire that set off the sprinkler system at the Yakima YWCA late this morning, Yakima firefighters said.

The fire was quickly extinguished, but the resulting flood of water damaged Christmas presents in a basement storage room, YWCA executive director Amy Flynn said.

The residents of the affected apartment — a woman and two children — and other residents and staff in the building were safely evacuated, Flynn said.

A mix of apartments and shelter lodging at the building, 818 W. Yakima Ave., holds a total of 30 women and 55 children.

“I’m just very thankful that everyone is OK,” she said.

Capt. Jeff Pfaff of the Yakima Fire Department said crews responded about 11:45 a.m. to an automatic alarm triggered by the sprinkler system.

Pfaff said the sprinklers limited the fire damage within the one apartment.

He estimated that 2,000 gallons of water was released before the system could be shut down.

Palm Springs, CA – Sprinkler system successfully activates in hotel fire; No injuries

A hotel fire in Palm Springs caused the sprinklers to go off and evacuated guests about 9:30 p.m. Monday night. It happened at the Extended Stay Hotel on Tahquitz Canyon Way.

Firefighters believe the fire was started by one of the guests but aren’t saying how it started. There are no reports of injuries.  Sixteen guest rooms were affected by water damage.  Fire crews continued to mop-up the mess Monday night.  The hotel is working on finding new places for guests to stay.

Staten Island, NY – Sprinkler system activates to help control restaurant fire

Firefighters are on the scene at Bocelli Restaurant in Grasmere after a report of a grease fire, according to an FDNY spokesman. Several units responded to the restaurant, located in a shopping center at 1250 Hylan Blvd., after the fire was reported at 1:03 p.m., the spokesman said.

No injuries have been reported and the incident appeared to be minor, the spokesman said. An employee said the sprinkler went off in the restaurant.

Several FDNY engines were inside the shopping center, and blocking the right lane of northbound Hylan. According to a patron inside the establishment at the time, the restaurant was fairly crowded when customers began smelling a strong gas odor. Workers asked everyone to leave and once the patrons were outside, the sprinkler system went off.

Omaha, NE – Sprinkler system puts out overnight fire that started in school art room kiln

No one was injured when a kiln in an art room at Beadle Middle School in southwest Omaha sparked a fire overnight. Authorities said the fire activated the school’s fire alarm and sprinkler system. Officials say the sprinklers put out the fire before firefighters arrived. The fire was confined to the art room and no students were in the school at the time.