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First Interstate Tower fire
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    First Interstate Tower fire

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    First Interstate Tower fire
    Fire in 62-story First Interstate Bank building in Los Angeles, Calif., 1988.jpg
    The First Interstate Tower, with several floors burning.
    Date May 4, 1988 (1988-05-04)
    Venue First Interstate Tower
    Location Los Angeles, California, United States
    Coordinates 34°2′57.2″N 118°15′25.7″W / 34.049222°N 118.257139°W / 34.049222; -118.257139Coordinates: 34°2′57.2″N 118°15′25.7″W / 34.049222°N 118.257139°W / 34.049222; -118.257139
    Type Fire
    Cause Overloaded electrical system
    Deaths 1
    Non-fatal injuries 40

    The First Interstate Tower fire was a high-rise fire that occurred on May 4, 1988, at the First Interstate Tower (now Aon Center) in Los Angeles, California, a 62-story, 860 foot (260 m) skyscraper, then the tallest building in the city. The fire destroyed five floors of the building, injured 40 people, and caused the death of a maintenance worker, when the elevator he was riding opened onto the burning 12th floor.

    Background

    The fire was so severe because the building was not equipped with fire sprinklers, which were not required for office towers at the time construction was completed in 1973. A sprinkler system was 90% installed at the time of the fire but was inoperative, awaiting the installation of water flow alarms.

    Fire

    The fire's origin has been attributed to overloading of electrical wiring by reactive distortion of lighting circuit currents. The fire was first alerted around 10:22pm on May 4, 1988 when a smoke detector on the 12th floor of the building activated. However, due to ongoing work on the sprinkler system being installed that evening, security personal immediately silenced the alarm, believing the activation to be a false alarm. Six minutes later, almost every smoke detectors from floors 12 thru 30 activated. The fire was not reported to emergency services until people outside the building called 911.

    A maintenance worker, Alexander Handy, took a service elevator to the 12th floor in order to investigate the smoke detectors, however he ultimately died when the elevator opened onto the burning 12th floor. Around 50 people were believed to be occupying the building at the time of the fire, with 37 individuals injured including 3 firefighters. Five individuals were rescued from the rooftop via helicopter.

    A total of 270 firefighters from 55 different companies and 4 helicopters were all called in to fight the fire. One firefighter with the Los Angeles Fire Department told reporters; "I was not sure we could hold it" due to the intensely hot blaze fueled by the synthetic fabrics and furnishings in the building. The fire, which resulted in $50 million in damages, was eventually contained at 2:19 AM.

    Aftermath

    According to the FEMA fire incident report, unusually good application of fireproofing on support members was a significant mitigating factor. The fireproofing used to protect the steel was Monokote supplied by GCP Applied Technologies (formerly W. R. Grace).

    Repair work took four months. Because of the fire, Los Angeles building codes were changed, requiring all high-rises to be equipped with fire sprinklers. This modified a 1974 ordinance that only required new buildings to contain fire sprinkler systems.

    The fire was dramatized in the 1991 telefilm, Fire: Trapped on the 37th Floor, starring Lee Majors, Lisa Hartman Black and Peter Scolari.

    See also

    Further reading

    External links


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