The Madrid Skyscraper
Fire
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=4127075
Sunday 13 February 2005
Firefighters shot jets of water onto
one of Madrids tallest office buildings this
morning, fighting to control a blaze that burned all
night and threatened to bring down the 32-story
skyscraper.
We are battling Madrids most important fire
in its history, said mayor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon
speaking from the scene at about 9am (0800GMT).
The situation right now is still of high
risk, he added, 10 hours after fire engulfed the
Windsor Building in the heart of Madrids business
and banking district. It will take hours until this
fire is declared under control.With morning
light, the damage from the spectacular blaze that lit up
the night and attracted thousands of onlookers was
evident. The top floors were little more than charred
steel twisted into destroyed shapes. Everything else was
burned away.
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Amazingly, a construction crane remained perched on
the roof. Roads for two to three blocks in all
directions were closed off to traffic, including the main
north-south artery Castellana boulevard. Fire trucks,
emergency and police vehicles blocked the intersections,
while service was curtailed on three subway lines that
ran below or near the building.
A filmy soot covered nearby sidewalks and buildings, and
a smell of burnt metal hung in the air.
The dirty white smoke that poured upward from the
building was visible from several kilometres (miles)
away.
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| There were no reported injuries except for three
firefighters who suffered smoke inhalation and
exhaustion. At its peak, temperatures reached 800 degrees
Celsius (1,472 F), said Javier Sanz, head of Madrid
firefighters, on Sunday. Against the night sky, bright
orange flames shot out the sides and top of building,
producing thick columns of black smoke. At about 3 am
(0200GMT), at least six of the upper floors collapsed in
a shower of flaming metal debris.
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The building, reportedly the fourth largest in
Madrid, was believed unoccupied when the fire broke out.
The cause was not immediately determined, though
emergency services spokesman Javier Ayuso said
firefighters think it may have been an electrical short
circuit.
Police evacuated a nearby apartment building and hosed
down neighbouring office buildings to keep the fire from
spreading.
Most of the Windsor Building, about 106 metres (350 feet)
high, housed offices of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, a
multinational financial services company. The fire
appeared to start about three-quarters of the way up the
building.
As the fire burned into the night, all that was visible
of the upper parts of the building was the flaming,
gutted remains of steel-reinforced concrete floors.
Construction of the Windsor Building began in 1973 and
was completed in 1979. The shiny gold building was a
landmark structure in Madrids business district.
The building had been surrounded with scaffolding due to
recent repairs.
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The Windsor Building fire
provides a graphic illustration of an 800ºC
inferno:
The fire was so bright it illuminated Madrid:
Click images
below for full sized photos
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Madrid to
dismantle fire-gutted skyscraper
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/050217/325/fcpak.html
Thursday February 17
MADRID (Reuters) - A 32-storey Madrid
skyscraper gutted by the biggest blaze in the city's
history will be taken apart piece by piece from the
outside because it is too dangerous to enter, a townhall
official says.
Madrid's eighth tallest building was reduced to a blackened concrete
skeleton at the weekend when a fire that lit up the night sky like a
huge torch devoured the 106-metre-high building from the top down.
"Given the seriousness and extent of the
damage ... the adoption of any security measure to avoid new collapses
would be totally useless," urban affairs councillor Pilar Martinez said
on Thursday.
"As a result it will be declared a ruin
and (we will proceed with) its complete demolition," she added.
A system of cranes will be set up to allow
the charred remains, in the heart of the city's financial district, to
be picked apart from outside.
"It can't be done from inside because of
the state of the building, so the cranes will have to be outside and
(workers) will cut it apart piece by piece and bring it down."
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See also:
The Collapse of WTC 1: Madrid Exposes a Fundamental Flaw
The
9/11 WTC Fires: Where's the Inferno?
What Really Happened