Date: Fri 08-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 08-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
fire-Irvin-Lane-Kahn
Full Text:
Accidental Fire Wrecks Vintage Home
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Firefighters responded to a 1:17 pm call from 3 Irvin Lane Tuesday and found a
blazing 19th-century house that had been accidentally set on fire.
Workmen removing old paint from the building with heat guns caused the fire,
according to Fire Marshal George Lockwood.
The fire caused approximately $310,000 in property damage and related costs,
Mr Lockwood said. The attic and second story received extensive damage.
Irvin Lane is a narrow dirt road that links Sawmill Road to the intersection
of Sawmill Ridge Road and Taunton Lake Road, near Taunton Lake.
One firefighter received a burned wrist but did not require medical transport,
said Sandy Hook Volunteer Fire and Rescue Company Chief Bill Halstead. Chief
Halstead served as the incident commander.
The house is a second home owned by Steve and Betty Kahn of The Bronx, New
York City, the fire marshal said. The couple arrived at the fire scene later
Tuesday. They plan to rebuild damaged portions of the house, Mr Lockwood said.
No one was home when the fire started, according to the fire marshal.
A three-man painting crew was using heat guns to strip off paint near the
building's facade when a heat build-up caused combustion, he said. Heat guns
are similar to portable hair dryers but produce an intense stream of hot air.
The fire marshal theorized the point of ignition may have been some cobwebs or
a wasp nest. The fire started behind a clapboard and then spread, he said.
As firefighters arrived, smoke was billowing from the house's upper reaches.
Flames then jumped out in spits from the gables, later leaping straight up in
columns. A plume of dense, black smoke was followed by clouds of diffuse,
chalky white smoke after firemen got water on the blaze.
Firefighters set up a portable water tank uphill of the house at the
intersection of Sawmill Ridge Road and Taunton Lake Road. Firemen ferried
thousands of gallons of water from Taunton Lake to the holding tank, from
which it flowed downhill in supply lines to the fire scene.
Although there was a pond on the property, firemen weren't able to use water
from it because there wasn't fire-truck access to it, Chief Halstead said.
To ventilate the burning structure, firefighters, using ladders, climbed onto
the house's roof with chain saws as white smoke curled from the house, which
has dual stone chimneys and double dormers.
But as the fire continued burning, firemen got off the roof to keep from
falling through.
Northeast Utilities went to the scene about one hour after the blaze was
reported to cut off electrical power.
Chief Halstead said the old house had balloon-style construction, which allows
a fire to spread easily. Once the fire got behind the house's clapboards, it
spread rapidly, he said.
The fire spread from the building's second story into its attic, he said. "We
had to open ceilings to get water into the attic," he said.
Of the conditions at the blaze, Chief Halstead said, "The guys were taking a
real beating inside." Firefighters were only allowed to consume the air from
two back-mounted air packs before they were taken off the fire and given a
rest, he said. "It was a hot day. ... It really took a toll on those guys," he
said. About 30 firefighters went to the scene.
"It was a tough fire, similar to the one we had on Church Hill Road back in
November," Chief Halstead said.
Last November, fire extensively damaged a circa 1760 house at 95 Church Hill
Road. In that blaze, weather conditions also played a role as firemen
struggled with accumulating ice.
Putting out fires in old buildings is difficult Chief Halstead said, noting
their balloon-style construction and the dryness of the aged wood.
Of Tuesday's blaze, the chief said, "It was a tough deal. Everybody worked
very hard. ... Everybody did an excellent job."
Workman Werlei Moraes said he and two co-workers were removing paint from the
house with heat guns. After the fire was discovered, firefighters were called
to the scene, he said. The painters are employees of Magic Brush Painters of
New Milford, Mr Lockwood said. Because the fire was accidental, no criminal
charges will be pressed, he said.
A representative of the painting firm's insurance company went to the fire
scene Tuesday.
Fire companies responding were Hawleyville, Hook and Ladder, Sandy Hook,
Dodgingtown, Botsford, Brookfield, Candlewood, Stony Hill, Bethel and
Southbury. The Newtown Volunteer Ambulance Corps and the regional paramedic
went to the scene, as did police. The Sandy Hook Ladies Auxiliary provided aid
at the fire.
The last firefighters left the scene at 7:12 pm.
