2 people unaccounted for after apparent NYC gas explosion

Mail.com

NEW YORK (AP) — Firefighters on Friday used high-powered water towers to extinguish pockets of fire at the site of an apparent gas explosion in Manhattan’s trendy East Village as authorities reported that two people were still unaccounted for.

Nineteen people were injured, four critically, after the powerful blast and fire sent flames soaring and debris flying Thursday afternoon. The police department hasn’t yet issued official missing-person’s reports on the two people who haven’t been located, the mayor’s office said.  

Preliminary evidence suggested that a gas explosion amid plumbing and gas work inside the building was to blame. An hour before the blast, utility company inspectors decided the work being done there was faulty.

The explosion caused the collapse of three five-story buildings and damage to a fourth, which was seven stories tall, the Fire Department of New York said. On Friday, firefighters poured gallons of water over the wreckage, a giant wave of crumbled brick, twisted metal and splintered wood.

A light rain tamped down much of the acrid burning smell, but neighbors said the sirens and smell from the burning buildings kept them up throughout the night. Friday morning was the first chance for many to see the damage up close.

Naomi Machado, who has lived in the East Village neighborhood for 35 years, was in tears as she glanced at the rubble on her way to work. “I’m totally devastated,” she said. “For my neighbors, for our neighborhood. We all look out for one another.”

Naho Ikechia, 36, was shocked by the scene — and grateful the damage wasn’t even greater. “If it would have been at night, when the restaurants are full and people are home from work, it would have been so much worse,” she said. “This is such a busy area.”

She grieved for those who lived in the buildings. “All their memories there, destroyed. It’s so sad.” Initial evidence pointed to a gas explosion. A plumber was doing work connected to a gas service upgrade in one of the now-destroyed buildings, and inspectors for utility company Con Edison had been there earlier Thursday, company President Craig Ivey said. But the work failed the inspection, partly because a space for the new meters wasn’t big enough, Con Ed said.

The state Department of Public Service was monitoring Con Ed’s response. A woman listed in city records as the building’s managing agent didn’t immediately respond to phone and email messages Friday. A contractor and engineers involved in work at the building that began last year declined to comment or didn’t respond to calls.

On Thursday night, Tyler Figueroa said his 23-year-old brother, Nicholas, had disappeared after going on a date at an East Village sushi restaurant, whose facade was still intact Friday. Figueroa said that the couple was paying for their meal when the blast occurred and that his date, who is in the hospital, remembers only stumbling outside before losing consciousness.

“I just pray my brother shows up,” he said. “We just hope my brother comes back.” Diners ran out of their shoes and bystanders helped one another escape the blast, which sent flames shooting into the air, witnesses said. Passers-by were hit by debris and flying glass, and bloodied victims were aided as they sat on sidewalks and lay on the ground.

The blast happened a little over a year after a gas explosion in a building in East Harlem killed eight people and injured about 50. A National Transportation Safety Board report released last week said a leak reported just before the blast may have come from a 3-year-old section of plastic pipe rather than a 127-year-old cast-iron segment that came under scrutiny immediately afterward.

Mayor Bill de Blasio noted that no one had reported a gas leak before Thursday’s blast. Con Edison said it had surveyed the gas mains on the block Wednesday and found no leaks. Bystander Blake Farber, who lives around the corner, said he’d been walking by the building and smelled gas seconds before the big blast.

The explosion was so forceful it blew the door off a cafe across an avenue and left piles of rubble on the sidewalk. One witness said his son helped to lift debris off a man so he could escape the restaurant where they had been eating.

http://www.mail.com/news/politics/3443600-2-people-unaccounted-apparent-nyc-gas-explosion.html#.7518-stage-hero1-2

4 thoughts on “2 people unaccounted for after apparent NYC gas explosion

  1. This article raises more questions than it gives answers. First of all, I think it’s impossible for that much gas to accumulate in the middle of the day without a hundred people smelling it long before there was enough to cause this explosion.

    And since when is ConEd (Consolidated Edison) involved with gas pipes and/or meters? As far as I know, ConEd deals with electricity only. Gas is delivered by Keystone energy, or Brooklyn Union Gas, and they’re responsible for gas leaks.

    “A woman listed in city records as the building’s managing agent didn’t immediately respond to phone and email messages Friday.”

    She flew the coop because she’s the one who thought she’d save a mint by doing the gas-pipe plumbing illegally. Gas pipe installations are hugely expensive because they require licensed plumbers to do the work and a complicated permit process. Hiring a few wetbacks who think they know something about plumbing saves a mint. (I looked into a new gas pipe installation once, and a plumber told me it would cost $700 just to file the paperwork)

    I think we’re being lied to on this one. We need more details, especially regarding who the missing persons are, and how this much gas could accumulate without anyone smelling it. This was a busy restaurant, with at least twenty apartments above it. The gas is laced with sulfur (or some other similarly-smelling odorous chemical) just to insure that someone smells it before it can explode. It had to be building up for a long time before this could happen.

    1. JR, the big red flag for me is The “FIRE PROTECTION SYSTEM” if not the whole building, the restaurant would have it to meet fire code?

  2. “The explosion reportedly came after the building’s owner and a contractor arrived to investigate the smell of gas, police said.”
    http://abcnews.go.com/US/mayor-de-blasio-east-village-fire-remains-investigation/story?id=29956875

    Info. about the Contractor:
    http://nypost.com/2015/03/27/nyc-contractor-probed-in-massive-east-village-gas-explosion/

    “Department of Buildings records show that plumbing work, which includes gas line work, was approved at the site from August through November of last year, said Stewart D. O’Brien, executive director of the Plumbing Foundation City of New York, a trade group.
    That work was completed and signed off on, Mr. O’Brien said, but no permit for further plumbing work had been approved. So it is not clear from the records what work was being performed, nor whether it was being done by a licensed master plumber.
    ‘All we know is that there was no approval from D.O.B. to do any plumbing work in that building after November 2014,’ said Mr. O’Brien, a former commissioner of the Department of Buildings.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/28/nyregion/plumbing-work-at-east-village-blast-site-lacked-permits-records-show.html?_r=0

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