I was briefly awoken this morning by the sounds of fire engines sometime before 6 AM, but quickly fell back asleep. When I woke up for real, I found out that many residents in a neighbourhood adjacent to mine did not have that luxury, as their homes were consumed or damaged in Edmonton’s largest residential fire<\/a>. The huge fire destroyed nine duplex (twin-family) houses and damaged a further 76<\/a>, mostly from one condo complex, and left hundreds without a home. <\/p>\n
Thankfully, no one was injured due to the actions of the fire department and neighbours who alerted others of the blaze, but the fire department was quick to comment that “lax building codes” exacerbated the situation<\/a>:<\/p>\n
The damage was astounding. The heat must have been tremendous, since houses across the street from the blaze had melted siding – these homeowners were the lucky ones. Houses closer to the construction site where the fire started were either burnt down completely, or severely damaged. I’ve uploaded all the photos I took to my Zooomr account<\/a>, so you can see the destruction for yourself. I’m very thankful to not have been affected by this, since the blaze happened in a neighbourhood that is built exactly<\/strong> like mine.<\/p>\n
Update<\/h3>\n
Check out this discussion<\/a> at the Globe and Mail<\/a> for some comments about the fire from Albertans and other Canadians.<\/p>\n
Update #2 (July 24th)<\/h3>\n
The cause of the fire has now been ruled an arson<\/a> by “process of elimination”, according to investigators with the Edmonton Fire Department, confirming what many suspected. With the fire having been deliberately set, a criminal investigation is now underway. Hopefully the perpetrator(s) can be caught, though it’s unlikely they will be able to return their debt to society. <\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"