Tag Archives: Night (9pm-5am)

Bristol, VA – Apartment kitchen fire controlled by sprinkler system

Five people were rescued Monday night when firefighters responded to a blaze in one unit at Douglass School Apartments in Bristol, Virginia.

Multiple crews arrived at the scene after the fire was reported at 9:17 p.m. at the apartment complex off Oakview Avenue, according to Mike Armstrong, the city’s fire chief.

Firefighters located the fire in the kitchen area of an apartment, where it appeared to have started on a stovetop with some type of combustible material, Armstrong said.

A sprinkler system contained the fire in the apartment where it started, but surrounding apartments still suffered water damage, he said.

A total of five occupants were evacuated from various apartments, and one person was treated for smoke inhalation but was not transported to a hospital, Armstrong said. No other injuries were reported.

Although the fire damage was contained, water damage in other apartments displaced at least two occupants, and the Red Cross is assisting them, he said.

The fire was determined to be accidental, the fire chief said.

North Okanagan, BC, Canada – Sprinkler system douses fire at pellet plant; No injuries reported

Firefighters in Lavington were called out to an early morning fire at the Pinnacle Pellet plant.

Lavington fire chief Marty Wright told iNFOnews.ca crews got the call 2:45 a.m. today, May 11, and were on site before 3 a.m.

Wright said the fire started in a fan chamber and was quickly doused by the automatic sprinkling system at the pellet plant.

“Pinnacle Pellet’s automated suppression system took care of most the fire for us,” Wright said. “We just got there and took care of the big fire that was in the chamber and then just dealt with hotspots throughout.”

Wright said there were no injuries and everybody is accounted for.

The fire chief said the main fan chamber was completely lost in the fire and the damage is now being accessed by the company.

In a post to Facebook, one eyewitness reported hearing a loud explosion.

Wright said 13 Lavington firefighters and nine from Coldstream responded to the fire. Crews left the scene at around 7 a.m..

Iowa City, IA – Sprinkler system contains fire at assisted living facility

Officials said that one person was taken to the hospital after a fire in a unit at a west side assisted living facility on Saturday morning.

At around 12:42 a.m. on Saturday, May 9, the Iowa City Fire Department was sent to a report of a structure fire at Melrose Meadows Retirement Community, located at 350 Dublin Drive. The staff reported a fire in one of the assisted living units.

Firefighters arrived and located the fire, which was being kept under control by a sprinkler system. They were able to extinguish the flames within five minutes.

The person living in the unit was able to be evacuated safely by the staff, and nearby units were also evacuated.

Fire department officials said that one person at the facility was taken to the hospital via ambulance. There was no information given about their condition.

Officials estimate the damage to the building at around $20,000.

The Coralville Fire Department, Iowa City Police Department, and Johnson County Ambulance Service assisted in the emergency response.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

Seattle, WA – Sprinkler system contains DUMPSTER fire next to middle school building; No injuries reported

12:02 AM: What started as a fire-alarm call at Madison Middle School has been upgraded to a “full response.” Updates to come.

12:06 AM: Firefighters are describing this as a “dumpster fire” and dismissing some of the units.

12:11 AM: Fire is reported “tapped” (out); next job, to turn off the automatic sprinklers.

12:40 AM: The cause is under investigation. We’ll follow up with SFD and the district later today.

3:09 PM: From SFD spokesperson David Cuerpo: “Crews confirmed it was a dumpster fire next to the school building. The building’s sprinklers were able to contain the fire while our firefighters fully extinguished it. No injuries reported. Our fire investigators were not dispatched to this scene as they responded to another fire that occurred at the same time” (in North Seattle).

Chelmsford, MA – Overhead sprinkler contains fire in apartment unit to chair it originated in

A fire last Friday at an apartment complex in which a woman suffered burns remains under investigation, Fire Chief Gary Ryan said.

Ryan said the Fire Department responded at 9:40 p.m. on May 1 to The Kinloch Apartments for a report of smoke from a building in the complex.

An alarm on the building’s fourth floor alerted the responding crew, who discovered smoke coming from a fourth-floor dwelling unit, Ryan said. The crew forced entry into the unit, and rescued a female resident from a burning chair.

The woman was extricated and taken by medical helicopter to Boston Trauma Center for burns, Ryan said.

An overhead sprinkler contained the fire to the chair, although the unit and a few others nearby sustained some water damage.

Worcester, MA – Sprinkler system helps prevent fire from spreading at historic building

Firefighters quickly knocked down a small fire on the first floor of the vacant Bull Mansion, 55 Pearl St.

The Central Fire Station received an alarm from the premises shortly after 11:30 p.m. Thursday.

Fire was showing on the first floor when firefighters arrived, District Fire Chief Adam Roach said at the scene.

Roach said fire was confined in one room and was put out in 10 minutes.

The sprinkler system was activated and help prevent the fire from spreading, Roach said.

A second alarm was sounded for precautionary reasons, according to Roach.

A historic property, the Bull Mansion was built in 1876 as a home. It was later used as a post of the Civil War veterans’ organization Grand Army of the Republic, and in more recent years has been used for dining and entertainment, including the popular “Haunted Speakeasy” series hosted by Niki Luparelli.

Loveland, CO – Sprinkler system saves 40 year old apartment building from complete loss; No injuries reported

Residents escaped uninjured from a fire at the Lovelander Hotel Apartments on Monday night after an evaporative cooler on the building’s north side caught fire.

The fire in the historic three-story building at 111 E. Fourth St. started around 10 p.m. between the building’s first and second floors, according to an email sent Tuesday morning by Loveland Fire Rescue Authority division chief and fire marshal Ned Sparks.

About 45 to 50 residents were either asleep or getting ready to go to bed, according to Sparks and the building’s owner, Astrid, who goes by one name. Fire Chief Mark Miller said no residents or firefighters were harmed.

Those residents have been displaced and won’t be able to return for one or two days, said Astrid, who was working through the channels to get electricity restored and have the building declared inhabitable again.

Sparks and Astrid said the fire sprinkler system that she had installed four months ago in the 40-apartment building saved many lives.

“I am convinced this fire would have had a huge loss of life and most likely the building would have been lost (quite probable the Elks Club and Cactus Grille too),” Sparks said in his email.

“Seeing firsthand how many of the people survived who would have perished in a catastrophic fire, I am reminded why we do what we do,” Sparks said.

In recent years, the Loveland Fire Rescue Authority has worked with the owners of the Lovelander  and two other historic buildings downtown to have sprinkler systems installed.

Historic buildings are quick to burn, and the fires are difficult to fight once they start, Sparks said.

“Once it got going, we couldn’t have stopped it,” Sparks said. “The interstitial space in this area is massive and had the fire not been suppressed would have run through this space unchecked.”

But because of the sprinklers, the fire never really took off.

Two residents who saw the fire and helped evacuate their neighbors said a swamp cooler, which wasn’t running, caught fire.

“I was just about to go to bed when I smelled something funny,” said Jamie Bridgeman, the resident manager who lives on the second floor directly above the cooler with her husband. “Then I started seeing smoke.”

“One of my residents had gotten off work and pulled up behind the building. She started screaming ‘fire!’ I looked out my window, and my swamp cooler was engulfed in flames,” said Bridgeman, who said her hair was singed by the fire. “I just started screaming ‘fire’ and came down here and pulled the alarm.

“Then I went back up and stood in the middle and screamed, ‘Fire! Everybody get out,” she said.

Two residents got fire extinguishers from the hallway and stood outside the building, spraying onto the fire, she said.

Steve Dupont, a resident of the first floor, said most residents used the metal fire escapes on the back side of the building.

“Everybody was coming out like they were supposed to,” he said.

On Tuesday afternoon, he was standing outside the Lovelander, waiting to go inside to help retrieve the belongings of a friend whose nearby apartment was damaged by a sprinkler head that activated. Astrid said the ceiling fell in that apartment because of the water damage.

Astrid was busy on the phone Tuesday, talking with an electrical contractor about getting the power restored. He told her that she would need an engineer to verify that the structure still was sound, even though she said the fire was mostly confined to the exterior cooler unit.

“Let’s get this underway right now,” she said.

Astrid expressed concern for her residents, whom she described as normally just a few hundred dollars away from homelessness — the working poor, elderly people and students.

“We really could use a little help,” she said, breaking down in tears under her coronavirus face mask when asked what kind of help.

“They’re all law-abiding, very decent citizens of Loveland,” she said. “I wish they could come back this afternoon, but it sounds like 24 to 48 hours.”

Bridgeman, the manager, said Sparks gave residents vouchers for motel rooms Monday night, and eight people were able to take rooms. The rest, such as herself and her husband, either stayed with friends or paid for motel rooms themselves, although they couldn’t really afford it.

Bridgeman said she had been talking with the American Red Cross about getting more vouchers to house the displaced residents until they could move back in.

Astrid was busy on the phone Tuesday, talking with an electrical contractor about getting the power restored. He told her that she would need an engineer to verify that the structure still was sound, even though she said the fire was mostly confined to the exterior cooler unit.

“Let’s get this underway right now,” she said.

Astrid expressed concern for her residents, whom she described as normally just a few hundred dollars away from homelessness — the working poor, elderly people and students.

“We really could use a little help,” she said, breaking down in tears under her coronavirus face mask when asked what kind of help.

“They’re all law-abiding, very decent citizens of Loveland,” she said. “I wish they could come back this afternoon, but it sounds like 24 to 48 hours.”

Bridgeman, the manager, said Sparks gave residents vouchers for motel rooms Monday night, and eight people were able to take rooms. The rest, such as herself and her husband, either stayed with friends or paid for motel rooms themselves, although they couldn’t really afford it.

Bridgeman said she had been talking with the American Red Cross about getting more vouchers to house the displaced residents until they could move back in.

Joplin, MO – Arson fire controlled thanks to fire sprinklers

About 2:23 AM early Friday morning Joplin Fire Department were alerted to a structure fire, 1110 East 7th, Teleperformance. Joplin Police officers were already on the scene clearing the building from a possible break-in and there was smoke in the building, so fire was dispatched immediately.

The source of the fire was located quickly by firefighters. However the sprinkler system had already gone off and drenched the interior of the building. We were told there was standing water everywhere. And heavy smoke damage.

The Joplin Fire Marshal arrived around 4:00 AM to begin the investigation. Addtionally Joplin Police investigators were present.

Sgt Tom Bowin of the Joplin Police Department told us overnight they had a suspect in custody. Now that man has been named and arrested on charges.

Ferdinand, IN – Sprinkler System helps put out fire from malfunctioning compressor; No injuries reported

Units of the Ferdinand Volunteer Fire Department responded late Monday night to the report of an explosion and heavy smoke showing at a business location on West Eighth Street.

Fire Chief John Hoppenjans said the first arriving units answering the 11:16 p.m. callout determined the explosion and resulting fire was contained in the air compressor room at Leibering Lumber, 514 W. Eighth St.

Hoppenjans said a 50-horsepower compressor had malfunctioned and exploded, blowing open the doors of its cabinet and touching off a fire that was coming out the eaves of the building housing the unit. A nightwatchman reported the issue to authorities.

A sprinkler system activated and did its job, Hoppenjans said, and firefighters followed up by shutting off the electricity to the building, extinguishing hot spots and ventilating the space.

The compressor was a total loss, but the building just sustained charring to rafters and can be repaired.

Five trucks and 26 firefighters were on the scene 90 minutes.

The Ferdinand Police Department and Memorial Hospital Emergency Medical Services assisted.

There were no injuries.

Kalamazoo, MI – Sprinkler system saves building from additional damages

Kalamazoo firefighters put out a fire in the building that formerly housed Rupert’s Brew House and Boogie Records.

Firefighters were dispatched at 11:06 P.M. to 773 W. Michigan Ave., formerly Rupert’s Brew House, April 20, 2020, and found fire coming from the front of the building.

Firefighters mounted an exterior attack knocking the fire down right away. They were able to send a crew into the attic, investigating to make sure there wasn’t any more damage that they couldn’t see from the outside.

It is not clear what caused the fire or the extent of the damage. In a written statement on Tuesday, Kalamazoo Public Safety officials said the building was unoccupied at the time of the fire.

The Fire Marshall was on scene.

Sergeant Chuck Mason with Kalamazoo Department of Public safety said that the sprinkler system which was activated, likely saving it from additional damage.

Mason said the fire was under control in 15 minutes.

The brewery operated for about six years, but hosted a comedy show for the final day on Sept. 8, 2019.

According to the Kalamazoo Public Library, the building has hosted many businesses throughout the years, including originally being the location of the Oakland Pharmacy, which opened in 1926. A fire hit the business on Feb. 26, 1935, but it was repaired.

In 1972 the building turned into a popular music store called Boogie Records that lasted until 1995.