|
Dozens
injured in Manhattan building explosion Thursday
By KATHERINE ROTH
Associated Press
NEW
YORK (AP) An explosion that may have been caused by chemicals
stored in a basement rocked a 10-story commercial building Thursday,
hurling glass and rubble across a city block and injuring 42 people,
at least 10 of them critically.
Authorities
quickly ruled out terrorism, though the blast conjured up memories
of Sept. 11 for some in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan.
It
was a giant boom a real giant boom, said Bill Beek,
who lives a half-block away. It sounded like an airplane crashing.
First
we thought it was a bomb, said Alex Vargas, 28, a student
at Apex Technical School next door. We all had to leave by
the back stairs. People were yelling and screaming, Hurry
up!
Victims
were taken to the hospital with burns, severe head injuries, broken
bones and cuts after the 11:30 a.m. blast.
Chemicals
stored in the basement by a sign company were being investigated
as a possible factor, said Fire Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta.
Plumbers had been working on the boiler in the building at the time,
but that did not appear to be the cause, investigators said.
Kaltech
sign companys general manager Phil Morgan said he felt two
consecutive blasts in the companys ground-floor offices.
One
pushed me up from my chair, the second one had me out of my chair,
he said. When it was over, the ceiling and a wall had come down.
Everything moved. The air was filled with dust.
Windows
along the block of West 19th Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues
were blown out, and several people were injured by flying glass.
The
facade of the building was damaged and several walls were blown
out, but it appeared to be structurally sound, Mayor Michael Bloomberg
said.
Police
and more than 100 firefighters poured into the area. Some victims,
dazed and bloody, sat on the curb awaiting medical attention.
The
building housed the sign company and other commercial tenants, said
Sid Dinsay, a spokesman for the city Office of Emergency Management.
Neighbors said the building was also used for storage by the Apex
school, which teaches welding, automotive repair and other trades.
Property
records show that the building is owned by 19th Street Associates
LLC. The office of Steven Kaufman, a principal in the firm, said
he had no immediate comment.
|