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Posted: Thursday, 19 July 2007 12:00AM

Manhattan Steam Explosion Leaves 1 Dead, Several Injured



NEW YORK (AP)  -- A titanic geyser of scalding vapor and earth erupted from a Manhattan street Wednesday when an underground steam pipe exploded near Grand Central Terminal, sending people running for cover as debris rained down on the street.

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One person died, officials said. About 30 more were injured, at least four seriously.

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The blast caused brief panic about another terror attack, with a scene eerily reminiscent of Sept. 11: people frantically rushing away from a Manhattan explosion and meeting chaos, debris and blaring sirens on the street. But officials quickly ruled out terrorism and said the blast was caused by a ruptured 83-year-old steam pipe.

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Steam and dirt boiled from a gaping hole in the ground for hours, generating a tremendous roar and spraying vapor as high as the top of the nearby Chrysler Building.

"I looked out the window and I saw these huge chunks that I thought were hail,'' said Debbie Tontodonato, 40, a nearby business manager. "We panicked, I think everyone thought the worst, thank God it wasn't. It was like a cattle drive going down the stairs, with everyone pushing. I almost fell down the stairs.''

VIDEO: Raw Video of Manhattan Explosion

The cause of the rupture remained under investigation. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the pipe, installed in 1924, might have exploded under extreme pressure caused by an infiltration of cold rainwater. It might have also been damaged by a water main break, he said.

"There is no reason to believe whatsoever that this is anything other than a failure of our infrastructure,'' Bloomberg said at a news conference at the scene.

Authorities couldn't immediately account for how the most seriously wounded victims were injured. Bloomberg said the person who died suffered cardiac arrest.

More info about asbestos from NYC Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene -- For more information on air quality and health concerns in your neighborhood, call 311.


1010 WINS VIDEO: Steam Blast Rips Through City; One Dies 

Many people were struck by falling chunks of asphalt or rock that had been blasted out of the ground. Mud covered some bystanders. A woman who was bleeding profusely was being helped by police while a man lay on a stretcher in the street.

Heiko H. Thieme, an investment banker in midtown, said the explosion was like a volcano. "Everybody was a bit confused, everybody obviously thought of 9-11.''

When the steam cleared at nearly 8 p.m., a crater many feet wide was visible in the street. A red truck lay at the bottom of the hole. Two city buses and a small school bus sat abandoned in the middle of Lexington Avenue, covered with grit.

There were also concerns about what was spewed into the air. Some of the pipes carrying steam through the city are wrapped in asbestos. Officials were doing air quality tests.

"The big fear that we have is there may or may not have been asbestos release,'' Bloomberg said.

He said he wouldn't know test results until later, but he said if there was a release, it may have washed away with the water that came with the steam.

Con Edison head Kevin Burke said the site of the explosion had been inspected earlier Wednesday as part of a routine response to heavy rains that flooded parts of the city. Crews searched for steam rising from manhole covers or cracks in the street -- an indication that the pipes may be in jeopardy. He said they found nothing at that time. The steam systems are inspected about every six weeks.

Burke also said that electric feeder cables have been affected by the steam explosion. "No power outages have been reported," according to Burke. Roughly 15-20 steam customers were affected. 

Burke said crews were working overnight to repair the damage. The pipe was carrying 150 pounds of pressure and the steam in the pipe was 200 degrees when it exploded.

Sixteen people were taken to Bellevue Hospital, including the person who died, said spokesman Stephen Bohlen. Two seriously injured patients were being treated in the hospital's trauma unit. The remainder suffered minor injuries, he said.

Two people were in critical condition at New York Weill-Cornell Medical Center, said hospital spokeswoman Emily Berlanstein.

Among the injured were three firefighters and Officer Robert Mirfield, who helped evacuate 75 people trapped in a nearby office building by cutting open a gate.

City officials told residents to stay out of the area, and if anyone was exposed to the falling debris to wash with soap and water and place their clothing in a plastic bag. Area residents should close windows and use air conditioning.

"Normal precautions are what you should take. There's no reason to panic,'' Bloomberg said.

The Buildings Department determined late Wednesday that nearby buildings were structurally sound but suffered some water damage and broken windows. Several feet of street near the 25-foot crater was in danger of collapse.

The scene was reminiscent of a similar blast nearly 20 years ago.

A steam pipe explosion near Gramercy Park in 1989 killed three people spewed loads of asbestos into the air -- a fact that Con Ed later admitted it concealed for days while residents were exposed.

Ernesto Berdejo, who works the cash register at Pax, a restaurant in the area, said he saw people running and crying down the street Thursday. He and co-workers stayed in the street for about 20 minutes, then went back into the restaurant.

"We didn't know what happened -- something in the ground, really loud. We thought it was terrorism,'' he said.

Millions of pounds of 400 degree steam are pumped beneath New York City streets every hour, heating and cooling thousands of buildings, including the Empire State Building.

The steam pipes are sometimes prone to rupture, however. The 1989 explosion sent mud and debris several stories into the air.

That explosion was caused by a condition known as "water hammer,'' when water condenses in a closed section of pipe. 

The sudden mix of hot steam and cool water can cause pressure to skyrocket, bursting the pipe.

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Insert photo: People evacuating buildings near 41st and Lexington by Deb Cote


(TM & © 2007 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO & EYE Logo TM & © 2007 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. In the interest of timeliness, this story is fed directly from the newswire and may contain occasional typographical errors. )
 
 
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