Thursday, August 11, 2016

2 killed, 31 injured after a massive explosion and fire leveled an apartment complex in Silver Spring, MD






Two dead, 31 injured in huge fire, explosion at Md. apartment complex





By Clarence Williams, Justin Jouvenal and Keith L. Alexander August 11 at 1:22 PM


The scene after a massive explosion and fire leveled an apartment complex in Md.
Five to seven residents are reported missing after a blast destroyed an apartment complex in Silver Spring.

Two people died and 34 were injured after a massive blast and fire leveled a Silver Spring, Md. apartment complex, forcing residents to toss children from upper floors and flee collapsing buildings, fire officials said Thursday.

Authorities said at lunchtime press conference they were still working to identify the dead and uncover the cause of the overnight blast and fire, which tore through the Flower Branch Apartments displacing more than 90 residents.

“Firefighters were met with heavy fire conditions and multiple rescues to be made,” said David Steckel, division chief of the Montgomery County Fire Department during the news conference

Firefighters continued to search for “some” missing residents of the Piney Branch Road apartments on Thursday afternoon, but backed off figures released earlier that five to seven people were still unaccounted for.

Montgomery County executive Isiah Leggett said “Our heart goes out to those affected.”

Leggett said at the news conference that officials had received a call on July 25 about the smell of gas at the complex, but it remained unclear if a leak played a role in the blast and fire.

Tim Firestine, the county’s chief administrative officer, said the county received a call at 10:16 p.m. July 25 about a smell of gas at 8701 Arliss St. and fire and rescue personnel responded at 10:20 p.m. They cleared the scene at 10:32 p.m., Firestine said, and the county is still trying to determine who responded, what tests if any were conducted and why the scene was cleared,

On Wednesday, a resounding blast occurred shortly before midnight that could be heard over a mile away and shook the affected buildings, 8701 and 8703 Arliss, like an earthquake, some residents said. An off-duty police officer was the first to report the blast at 11:52 or 11:54 p.m., officials said.

The explosion sent a door across the street, left clothes in trees and shoes strewn across a road. The two buildings resembled the site of a bomb blast with a gaping hole left in them. The flames that followed created a desperate scene.

“People were dropping children and jumping out of other windows,” Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said of the fire at an early morning briefing on Thursday. “Everybody was getting out of the building as rapidly as possible.”

Goldstein said that a K-9 team searching the rubble of the apartment complex had a “hit.” He said it could indicate someone is trapped in the debris. It was unclear if that hit turned out to be one of the people confirmed dead.




Massive explosion and fire devastates Silver Spring apartment complex
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A three-alarm explosion and fire erupted in a Silver Spring, Md., apartment complex in the early hours of Aug. 11. At least two people were killed and more than 30 injured. (Jenny Starrs, Clarence Williams, Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

Clara Mazunder said she woke up to a loud “boom,” looked out her bedroom window and saw flames. The 39-year-old yelled to her two sons, ages 18 and 10, to get out of the apartment.

As she was running out of the building, she frantically pounded on her neighbors’ doors yelling “Fuego. Fuego,” she said, using the Spanish word for fire.

On Thursday morning, she stood outside a temporary shelter at a recreation center with all she had left: a wool jacket, her nightgown, pink flip-flops and her large white purse.

“It was so scary,” Mazunder said. “But I am grateful.”

Montgomery County Fire Battalion chief Dorcus Howard Richards said several of those injured were transported to local hospitals. The residents’ injuries ranged from minor to serious, Goldstein said. Some had respiratory injuries from smoke, and others had burns and fractures from jumping out of windows. The firefighters suffered non life-threatening injuries.



By 7 a.m., Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring said 11 patients had been treated and released after suffering minor injuries. Medstar Washington Hospital Center said they were also treating five patients, but declined to release their conditions. Some had already gone home.

Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park, Md. said it had received nine patients and several had been treated and released as of 10:30 a.m. One was transferred and one was admitted for observation as a precaution. The hospital declined to release the conditions of the patients still in its care.

About 120 firefighters and EMS workers, from Montgomery County and beyond, were on the scene at the mass casualty incident. Firefighters made many rescues of people trapped inside the apartment buildings, including deploying a lader truck to rescue residents trapped on upper floors of one of the buildings, officials said.

By Thursday morning, some firefighters lay in the road next to the apartment building, exhausted from their efforts.

Howard Richards said firefighters arrived on the scene shortly after midnight, near the intersection of Piney Branch Road and Arliss Street. The fire quickly grew from two to three alarms. She said firefighters in a nearby station heard the explosion.

“It’s going to be a long, extended investigation to figure out what caused this fire,” Howard Richards said.

Goldstein, the fire chief, said that there were natural gas furnaces and stoves in each of the units, but authorities don’t know what might have caused the blaze. It took at least an hour and 45 minutes for the fire be brought under control with the assistance of Washington Gas helping to turn off gas to the building.

He said building managers and the fire department had not received reports of problems before the blast and fire occurred.

A debris field outside the collapsed buildings extended about 50 yards to a parking lot across the street, and included shattered glass, bricks, concrete and wood. The debris appeared to include an apartment door that was sitting on a knoll and the smell of burning wood still hung in the air Thursday morning.

An overnight fire and explosion at an apartment building in Silver Spring, Md., injured more than 30 people. (Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post)

Corey Price, who lives in an apartment building next to the location of the explosion, said he woke up after someone frantically knocked on his window.

“People were screaming for help and crying and screaming. It was really bad,” Price said.

Howard Richards said the fire department was working with apartment managers to determine the names of residents of each affected apartment and confirm they were accounted for. She said it was too early to say the missing residents were dead, because some may have been out of town, working a nightshift or otherwise away.

One woman at the scene told NBC4 she was trying to reach her uncle by phone, but was unable to do so.

Willie Morales, a resident of the apartment complex, was walking across Piney Branch Road from a chicken restaurant when he collapsed to the ground on his stomach in fear from the loudest explosion he ever heard.

“It was one big boom, like nothing I’d ever heard,” Morales said. When he decided it was safe to rise to his feet, he saw flames coming from the basement and first floor of the apartment building in front of him.

Morales said he tried to bang on windows and to tell people to get out. He said he was screaming: “Fire! Fire! You have to get out!” in English and Spanish. “I tried to knock on the door and windows,” he said. “I’ve never seen a fire like this in my life.”


An overnight fire and explosion at an apartment building in Silver Spring, Md., injured more than 30 people. (Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post)

Emergency crews respond to a three-alarm apartment complex explosion and fire in Silver Spring, Md. (Clarence Williams/The Washington Post)

Those who fled the fire stood in grassy areas of nearby apartments and on sidewalks, and in bus shelters as parents held onto small children. Some onlookers took videos and pictures with their cell phones of the massive emergency response. A huge plume of gray smoke billowed from at least one burning building.

Goldstein said commuters should expect delays in the area because Piney Branch Road and Arliss Street are expected to be blocked for most of the day. Firefighters began to allow residents from surrounding buildings back inside, but power remained out in the area.

“The daylight will make our operation safer,” Goldstein said.

Goldstein said the fire department will bring in heavy equipment to shore up the damage buildings and sift through the rubble.


Washington Gas spokesman Jim Monroe declined to say if the utility company had gotten calls about smells or gas leaks at the building or if any problems had been reported before the fire.

“We are supporting the investigation,” he said. “Information will be shared publicly at the appropriate time.”

Monroe said Washington Gas is providing that information to local, state and federal officials “in support of their determination of cause.”

Washington Gas was on the scene and workers helped control the gas-fed fire, fire officials said. By about 1:45 a.m., firefighters had knocked down most of the fire, but the flames continued to smolder into the daylight hours.

The building is part of a densely populated area of Silver Spring’s Long Branch community. Flower Branch is among the area’s largest multi-family apartment complexes, with 362 units spread across 11 garden-style apartment buildings and 10 acres.

A woman who answered the phone Thursday morning at Kay Apartment Communities, the corporate owner of Flower Branch Apartments, said the company had no immediate comment on the explosion and that the owner was at the scene assessing damage. A call to the company’s president, Clark Melillo, was not immediately returned.

Officials from Montgomery County and the American Red Cross set up a temporary shelter at the Long Branch Recreation Center, near the scene of the fire. Paul Carden, regional disaster officer for the Red Cross, said there were about 60 to 70 people at the location.

He said the Red Cross had set up cots in the gymnasium and was preparing to begin helping people find more permanent shelter. Red Cross expected to be on the scene for several days.

“The number of households impacted is significant,” Carden said. “And the impact is more emotional because it was an explosion. I was at the scene and there’s someone’s shoe here, someone’s sock there and someone’s papers over there.”

Chuck Crisostomo, operations chief of Montgomery County Emergency Management and Homeland Security, said many families have gone back to the apartments to see if they can recover belongings, though Crisostomo said up 24 units have been completely destroyed.

“When I ask them their address and I hear the address that is completely demolished, I have to break the news to them that [they] may not have any belongings to salvage whatsoever,” Crisostomo said.






Bill Turque, Luz Lazo, Fenit Nirrapil and LaVendrick Smith contributed to this report.