IE 11 Not Supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.

Explosion in Seattle's Greenwood Neighborhood Destroys Buildings, Injures 9 Firefighters

There were no reports of deaths, although search teams were expected to sift through the rubble later in the morning.

APTOPIX Seattle Explosion
(TNS) - Nine firefighters were injured when an apparent natural-gas leak sparked an early morning explosion Wednesday that leveled a building and destroyed several businesses in Seattle’s Greenwood neighborhood.

Eight firefighters and one battalion chief were taken to Harborview Medical Center with minor injuries, Seattle Fire Department spokeswoman Corey Orvold said. All were later released Wednesday morning.

There were no reports of deaths, although search teams were expected to sift through the rubble later in the morning.

Firefighters had responded to a report of a natural-gas leak near Greenwood Avenue North and North 85th Street around 1:04 a.m., according to Orvold. As firefighters were searching for the source of the leak, a huge explosion ripped through the buildings about 1:40 a.m.

The blast and resulting fire prompted a huge response by emergency crews, which pulled the injured firefighters from the rubble. Firefighters spent several hours dousing the flames.

Three businesses, Neptune Coffee, Mr. Gyro’s and a Quik Stop convenience store, were destroyed in the blast. A bike shop, G&O Family Cyclery, was heavily damaged.

“It just feels like a bomb went off,” said bike-shop owner David Giugliano, who heard the blast from his home about four blocks away.

Giugliano said the force of the blast embedded debris from Neptune Coffee into the side of his shop.

“I don’t know how bad it is,” said Giugliano. “I just feel terrible for the neighborhood. I love this block.”

Bryan Howard, a photographer for Q13 FOX, was covering the reported gas leak on the corner of North 84th Street and Greenwood Avenue North when the building exploded.

“I started running … debris was falling from the sky,” he said.

Howard said he saw several injured firefighters, including one with cuts on the back of his head and blood on his face.

Nearby resident Erica Jorgensen, 45, said she heard a big boom and thought it was an earthquake.

She said her daughter takes a bus on North 85th Street to get to school.

“I’m feeling fortunate this didn’t happen during the day,” Jorgensen said. “My daughter could have been killed.”

Buildings up to a block and a half away were also damaged by the force of the blast. Debris littered the upper branches of bearby trees.

Workers spent Wednesday morning boarding up the shattered windows of nearby Chocolati Café.

“This is the main strip. It’s definitely going to affect people,” said Darla Weideman, 34, cafe manager.

The cafe set up a table with coffee for first responders. The cafe manager is not sure it will be open Wednesday but have been serving people coming in.

“We got our problems, but you never think of a gas explosion (in Greenwood) — that’s the last thing you think of, and the most dramatic,” she said.

Greenwood Avenue North is closed from North 87th Street to North 84th Street, and North 85th Street is closed from First Avenue Northwest to Dayton Avenue North.

Andy Wappler, spokesman for Puget Sound Energy, said investigators have not pinpointed the source of the blast, but the theory that it was caused by natural gas is a “reasonable assumption.” However, it could take weeks before that’s confirmed, he said.

In the meantime, gas has been shut off the to area, he said.

If the explosion was caused by a buildup of natural gas, he said it’s unclear whether it was ignited inside or outside the building.

By 7 a.m., five of the injured firefighters had been released from Harborview and the four remaining firefighters were in the process of being discharged, said hospital spokeswoman Susan Gregg.

While some suffered minor cuts and abrasions, others didn’t suffer any injuries, but due to the force of the explosion were examined by doctors to rule out internal injuries, Gregg said.

The remaining injured firefighters were released by 8 a.m.

“We know, as firefighters, this is a very dangerous job,” Seattle Fire Chief Harold Scoggins said at the scene.

The explosion happened across North 85th from a devastating 2009 arson that destroyed four restaurants in the 1910-era Eleanor Roosevelt Building and caused heavy smoke and water damage to the Taproot Theatre playhouse.

Kevin Swalwell, a mentally-ill homeless man with a history of fire-setting, pleaded guilty in connection with the fire and nine othersi. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

The arsons caused an estimated $3 million in damages.

Evan Bush: ebush@seattletimes.com.Seattle Times staff reporter Sara Jean Green contributed to this story, which includes information from Times archives.

———

©2016 The Seattle Times

Visit The Seattle Times at www.seattletimes.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Sign up for GovTech Today

Delivered daily to your inbox to stay on top of the latest state & local government technology trends.