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Bayfront residents evacuated

By ABHI RAGHUNATHAN, CASEY CORA and LEONORA LAPETER
Published July 2, 2007


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ST. PETERSBURG - A kitchen fire this morning forced the evacuation of residents at the downtown Bayfront Tower. All residents were allowed to return at 1 p.m.

 

Nearly 75 people were evacuated after fire broke out about 10 a.m. in the kitchen of a 27th-floor condominium, said Assistant Chief William Jolley of St. Petersburg Fire Rescue. He said the fire began after a resident turned on the self-cleaning mode of a 3-month old oven.

"When the alarm went off I didn't take it seriously so I don't have anything with me, although I did take the dogs, " said Rosemary Zava, 47, as she walked her two Westies, Radar and Dusty, outside the building two hours later.

Zava said all of the residents had to walk down flights of stairs on either end of the building and it was hard for some of the elderly residents.

"It was very difficult for them to go down the steps, " said Zava who lives on the 12th floor. "One elderly lady on our floor who was wheelchair-bound, a fireman had to carry her over his shoulder down 12 flights of stairs."

Zava and other residents were attempting to make sure none had been left inside the building.

"We're taking a nose count to see that whoever was in building is where they ought to be, " said Mary Jones, 72, as she walked around the base of the building.

Some residents were worried, Zava said, because they had not seen two elderly women in their 90s outside in either the park across the street or in the air-conditioned buses that fire officials brought to provide shelter from the heat.

"We think they stayed in the building, " Zava said. "This is a problem. We're going to have to deal with the evacuation of the elderly."

Residents had to wait a few hours to return to their units while firefighters removed smoke from the hallways.

"It smells in the hallway but there’s no severe smells in the units themselves,” said Jones Monday afternoon.
Jones said she learned that some of the unaccounted for elderly women were brought down by firemen and kept together in a lower level of the building.

The fire, which brought out nearly 26 fire engines and nearly twice as many fire personnel to the building at One Beach Drive SE, was extinguished with a water hose. It did not spread to any other condominiums and damage was limited to the kitchen in which it started.

Residents wiled away the time in the air conditioning of the two PSTA buses used to get the evacuated residents out of the heat of the day.

One person was taken to Bayfront Medical Center with heat-related injuries. Another resident tripped while walking down the stairs, though no medical treatment was required.

[Last modified July 2, 2007, 18:26:58]


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Comments on this article
by R 07/05/07 09:08 AM
There are many elderly residents in this building, after walking down up to 27 flights of stairs, & standing in the heat for 4 hours, I believe they needed the buses. They could suffer heat stroke. Do you have more than 250 residents in your home?
by Linda 07/02/07 10:56 PM
Aunt Dot told Mom that the oven that caught on fire was a Thermidor - very expensive. It was the Mrs. Workman's condo. I went all through school with her son Gary.
by Robby 07/02/07 07:48 PM
K why are you so negative? The elderly can suffer serious medical probems form heat stroke... Would you want your mom out in the sun for three hours? As a FF/Paramedic I can see it is quite clear that you only care about yourself and no one else....
by doug 07/02/07 07:21 PM
If those 26 fire trucks were properly manned there should have been far more firefighters there. Is the fire dept playing the shell game here
by Floridiot 07/02/07 06:39 PM
Hey K, I think you inhaled too much smoke. You spell like a 6 year old. Provited is proviDed; blasing is blaZing; and son is sUn. And just because the sun isn't out doesn't mean it's not hot. It's July in Florida! When you're 75 you'll understand.
by steve 07/02/07 05:27 PM
Stop being selfish and ignorant. If your elderly parents or loved ones lived in that building or were in a similar situation, you'd be grateful for the buses and the concern...
by Bill 07/02/07 05:04 PM
I would like to buy an ice-cold six pack for the firefighter who carried the old lady down 12 flights of stairs.
by k 07/02/07 04:40 PM
Well when my house was on fire there was no air conditioner bus provited. It was cloudy all day. There wasn't a blasing son out. Who pays for the bus? The city?
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