Blaze chars Westside home
COSTA MESA -- A Westside family won’t return to its Wallace Street
home any time soon, after a fire gutted the one-bedroom apartment
Wednesday night.
Four of the seven family members living in the apartment were home
at the time of the 10:21 p.m. fire; they were quickly evacuated after
firefighters arrived and saw flames shooting out of the windows of
the apartment in the 2000 block of Wallace.
One of the family members was sleeping when the stucco apartment
caught fire, Costa Mesa Fire Capt. Herb Ohde said.
“The people in [the apartment] lost everything upstairs,” Ohde
said. “There were no smoke detectors.”
The blackened exterior walls of the apartment on Thursday told the
tale of the blaze, as neighborhood children played outside the
building. Black swaths of burned stucco showed on both sides of the
10-apartment complex.
After the occupants were evacuated from the building, firefighters
went to work on the blaze, soaking the building in a cascade of water
from their hoses. On Thursday, the water-soaked interior stairway in
the burned unit provided a route from the largely non-burned lower
floor and torched upper floor.
Shards of broken glass and burned wood lay in the alley behind the
apartment and in the communal area outside the front doorway.
American Red Cross workers swept in Wednesday night to help the
displaced family, providing clothes and other assistance, Ohde said.
The fire did not damage the two units on each side of the burned
apartment much. They did suffer smoke damage, though, Ohde said.
They were evacuated because their electric power was on the same
electrical circuit and could not be safely turned on.
One Costa Mesa firefighter suffered minor burns on his foot, after
his leg fell through the second-story floor of the burned unit. He
was treated at the scene and released. More than 40 firefighters
initially responded to the fire to battle the blaze.
In addition to firefighters from Costa Mesa, units from Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach and several other cities helped extinguish
the flames.
Officials are still trying to determine the cause of the blaze
Ohde said.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.