Skip to content


Archives for

See all posts in the network tagged with

Second Alarm Apartment Fire, VA

No comments

Photo by Maxim Boldin

 
 
 
A second alarm fire occurred in a four-story apartment building in the 20500 block of Reserve Falls Terrace, Loudoun County, VA that took command of over 13 apartment units.
 
The fire was reported at 07:39 hours on Sunday morning November 20, 2011.
 
Arriving companies found heavy fire was coming from the building. Fire crews initiated an offensive attack but were forced to evacuate due to potential structural collapse considerations.
 
A second alarm was activated and a defensive attack was mounted until it was safe for crews to get back inside. Firefighters from Sterling, Lansdowne, Ashburn and Fairfax responded to the fire. Crews remained on the scene for several hours performing overhaul and checking for hot spots.
 
At least 13 units in the building were damaged, displacing over 26 occupants. There were no reported injuries.
 
 

Alpha Division Aerial View-Street Side

 

Bravo Division (note grade change from the Alpha to Charlie sides)

 

Fire Extension thru Roof at Bravo Division Charlie

 

Typical Interior Room Compartments

 
 

Typical Unit Floor Plans

 
 
 
Links
 

 

Operational Considerations at Garden Apartment Complex and Residencies

 Fire ground operations at Garden Apartment Complex and Multiple Occupancy Residencies require due diligence and well-coordinated multiple company operations that have well established operating protocols, clearly defined ( but flexible) company and response duties and an effective and well-practiced and experienced cadre of company and command officers.  

Due to the likely demands and complexities of evolving and expanding incident conditions at fire involving Garden Apartment type buildings and complexes, couple with the civilian life safety concerns due to occupancy density and numbers, immediate and timely resources are necessary to conduct multiple and concurrent functional assignments that demand effectiveness, efficiency and trained company compositions.

Strategy and Tactics at Garden Apartment Complex and Residencies required special instructions, insights and knowledge that goes well beyond the practices and methodologies typically deployed at single family residential fire incidents.

Multiple occupancy dwelling units, occupancy loads, multiple floors, building construction, structural systems and assemblies, construction and material, methods of construction and building and occupancy layouts and configurations results in fast spreading and extreme fire conditions, common avenues for internal and exterior fire travel, congested travel paths and access/egress points, multiple hose line deployment strategies with adequate fire flows, effective building laddering, forcible entry support and concurrent, mobile and skilled search and rescue  capabilities.

The ability to deploy and operate multiple hand lines is mission critical at fires in these multiple occupancy dwellings. As are a number of other strategic and tactical functions; but again, If the fire is controlled and goes out- all the other escalating, concurrent and immediate demands, needs and requests along with highest risk factors for survivability to occupants and firefighter alike diminishes rapidly and can be managed.

 Here are some discussion points to chat about around the kitchen table;

  • Are your engine companies effectively set up and outfitted to stretch out and deploy extended lines, multiple lines on common floors or within various floor elevations?
  • Have you and your company practiced coordinated multiple company search and rescue protocols for multiple occupancy floor areas?
  • Have you considered the needs, impacts and operational deployment for a RIT on a common floor during extreme fire conditions that required interior common hallway access and extraction of a firefighter in distress or incapacitated?
  • Do you have the capability to deploy and implement multiple companies for coordinated roof ventilation operations?  IF so, have they training together in the past?
  • How effective and knowledgably are you and your company in initiating and completing multiple trench, strip or louver roof ventilation cuts?
  • Are you aware of the signs for potential or imminent collapse for the various types of garden apartment buildings in your response area? Did you know there are different considerations based on the vintage, age and construction systems and assemblies utilized?
  • When was the last time you either pre-fire planned any of your garden apartment building or complexes? Or did a company walk-through?
  • Which ones are protected by a fixed sprinkler system?
  • Do you what the water fire flow capabilities are for the hydrants and system in any of these garden apartment building or complexes?
  • Have you done any table top exercises considering a standard alarm assignment fire, or an escalating multiple alarms incident?
  • Do you consider occupancy risk versus occupany type for the buildings you respond to?
  • Are your considering the effects of extreme fire behavior and the potential for wind driven fire conditions in your IAPs?
  • Are you considering the collapse and compromise potential for floor and roof assemblies in your assignments?
  • Are you fully prepared for immediate or multiple RIT needs and deployments?
  • Do you understand how these garden apartment buildings are constructed, configured and will impact your strategic and tactical assignments?
  • Do you have the right skill set for performing safely and effectively in your assigned role and responsibilities? If not, what are you going to do about that gap?

 

Leadership, Purpose, Service and Reason

No comments

Leadership, Purpose, Service and Reason

Here are two powerful videos that share important messages that apply to each and every firefighter, company officer and commanders: coming from very different perspectives and areas-But directly applicable, IF you listen to the messages, the themes and relate them to what we do each and every day.

The names and placed change; but the meaning and message behind these words resonate with the traditions, values and virtues of the Fire Service

Four-star General Stanley McChrystal shares what he learned about leadership over his decades in the military. How can you build a sense of shared purpose among people of many ages and skill sets? By listening and learning — and addressing the possibility of failure.

 

Direct Link to TED: http://www.ted.com/talks/view/lang/eng//id/1112

 

 

General Mark A. Welsh III, USAFE CC, speaks to USAFA  Direct Link HERE

 

NFPA 2010 Fire Loss in the U.S. Report issued

No comments

NFPA releases 2010 “Fire Loss in the U.S.” report

New report shows lower number of fires but increased fire deaths

 

Public fire departments responded to 1,331,500 fires in the United States during 2010, a slight decrease from the previous year and the lowest number since 1977, according to a new report (759 KB) issued by the National Fire Protection Association(NFPA).

These fires caused an estimated 3,120 civilian fire deaths, a 4 percent increase from a year ago; an estimated 17,720 civilian fire injuries, also a 4 percent increase from the previous year; and more than $11.5 billion in property damage, a significant decrease from the year before.

Fire Loss in the U.S. analyzes 2010 figures for fires, civilian fire deaths, injuries, property damage, and intentionally set fires. Estimates are based on data collected from fire departments that responded to NFPA’s Annual National Fire Experience Survey.

There were an estimated 482,000 structure fires reported to fire departments in 2010, a very slight increase from a year ago. The number of structure fires was at their peak in 1977, the first year that NFPA implemented its current survey methodology, when 1,098,000 structure fires occurred. 

“We have made tremendous progress in reducing the fire problem in the United States since we began looking at these numbers in the late 70’s,” said Lorraine Carli, vice president of Communications for NFPA. “But this report shows us that more must be done to bring the numbers down even further. We continue to see the vast majority of deaths occurring in homes, a place where people often feel safest. These survey results will be combined with data from the U.S. Fire Administration’s (USFA’s) National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS) to determine how often specific fire circumstances occur and where we can most effectively focus our efforts.”

Other key findings from the report include:

  • A fire department responded to a fire every 24 seconds.
  • 384,000 fires or 80 percent of all structure fires occurred in residential properties.
  • About 85 percent of all fire deaths occurred in the home.
  • 215,500 vehicle fires occurred in the U.S. during 2010, causing 310 civilian fire deaths, 1,590 civilian fire injuries and $1.4 billion in property damage.
  • 634,000 outside and other fires occurred in the U.S. during 2010 causing $501 million in property damage.

Download the full report “Fire Loss in the United States during 2010”.

 

Overview of 2010 U.S. Fire Experience

Number of Fires

  • 1,331,500 fires were attended by public fire departments, a slight decrease of 1.3% from the year before
  • 482,000 fires occurred in structures, a very slight increase of 0.3%
  • 384,000 fires or 80% of all structure fires occurred in residential properties
  • 215,500 fires occurred in vehicles, a decrease of 1.6% from the year before
  • 634,000 fires occurred in outside properties, a decrease of 2.3%

What do these fire frequencies above mean?

  • Every 24 seconds, a fire department responds to a fire somewhere in the nation.
  • A fire occurs in a structure at the rate of one every 65 seconds, and in particular a residential fire occurs every 82 seconds.
  • Fires occur in vehicles at the rate of 1 every 146 seconds, and there’s a fire in an outside property every 50 seconds

Civilian Fire Deaths

  • 3,120 civilian fire deaths occurred in 2010, an increase of 3.7%
  • About 85% of all fire deaths occurred in the home
  • 2,640 civilian fire deaths occurred in the home (1-and-2 family dwelling homes and apartments), an increase of 2.9%
  • 285 civilians died in highway vehicle fires.
  • 90 civilians died in nonresidential structure fires
  • Nationwide, there was a civilian fire death every 169 minutes

Civilian Fire Injuries

  • 17,720 civilian fire injuries occurred in 2010, an increase of 3.9%. This estimate for civilian injuries is on the low side, because many civilian injuries are not reported to the fire service
  • 13,800 of all civilian injuries occurred in residential properties, while 1,620 occurred in nonresidential structure fires
  • Nationwide, there was a civilian fire injury every 30 minutes.

Property Damage

  • An estimated $11.6 billion in property damage occurred as a result of fire in 2010, a decrease of 7.5% from last year
  • $9.7 billion of property damage occurred in structure fires.
  • $7.1 billion of property loss occurred in residential properties.

Intentionally Set Fires

  • An estimated 27,500 intentionally set structure fires occurred in 2010, an increase of 3.8%
  • Intentionally set fires in structures resulted in 200 civilian deaths, an increase of 17.7%
  • Intentionally set structure fires also resulted in $585,000,000 in property loss, a decrease of 14.5%
  • 14,000 intentionally set vehicle fires occurred, a decrease of 6.7% from a year ago, and caused $89,000,000 in property damage, a decrease of 17.6% from a year ago.

 

Overview 2010

 

1977 - 2010

 
 

Community Size and Fires 2010

Related Posts with Thumbnails