Thursday, 23 Jan, 2025

National

Fire at Jackson Heights’ building

Special Correspondent |
Update: 2014-04-22 00:12:44
Fire at Jackson Heights’ building

NEW YORK: A fire broke out at a Queens commercial building in Jackson Heights of New York on Tuesday.

Fire caught the four-story office building at 5:30pm on Monday local time at 74-09 37th Avenue. Fire fighters are on effort to extinguish the flame.

For about two hours, flames and dark, thick smoke poured from the building’s third and fourth floors, which appear to have been gutted by the blaze.

While the color of the smoke began to lighten around 8:00pm, the Fire Department 10:30 p.m. that the fire was still not under control. It reached five alarms just before 10:00pm, officials said.

Witnesses said the fire started on the third floor and then climbed to the fourth.

“We actually thought it was an accident. It sounded like two cars that hit, and like the glasses had popped,” Anna, who had a bird’s-eye view of the fire and called 911, told. “So we just opened the window and looked down.”

A fire department spokesperson said one child was taken to Elmhurst Hospital Center for observation and a firefighter suffered minor injuries.

However, a number of storefront businesses on the street level, including Frank’s Pharmacy, had to be evacuated.

“We all just ran out,” pharmacy owner Frank Buonagurio said. “We locked the door behind us. And it just kept spreading. They can’t get it under control.”

“It’s very scary, especially when they said, ‘Get out, get out!” a pharmacy employee said. “They didn’t give us a chance to get our stuff.”

It was unclear Monday night what caused the fire.

Thousands of Bangladeshi Americans live in the Jackson Heights and 74th Street has most of the Bangladeshi grocery stores and clothing stores there.

BDST: 0956 HRS APR 22, 2014

All rights reserved. Sale, redistribution or reproduction of information/photos/illustrations/video/audio contents on this website in any form without prior permission from banglanews24.com are strictly prohibited and liable to legal action.